Bangkok Post

DP World Tour hands out bans and fines to LIV rebels

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The DP World Tour yesterday banned members who played in the inaugural Saudi-funded LIV Golf Invitation­al Series event from three tournament­s and fined them £100,000 (US$123,000) each.

Players including England’s Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood and Spain’s Sergio Garcia all took part in the event outside London earlier this month despite not having received releases to do so from the circuit, formerly known as the European Tour.

The PGA Tour slapped a ban on its members minutes after the start of the first tournament but the DP World Tour delayed making a decision.

However, citing a breach of regulation­s, it has now imposed sanctions, which in addition to the six-figure fines include bans from next month’s Scottish Open, the Barbasol Championsh­ip and Barracuda Championsh­ip, all of which are co-sanctioned with the PGA Tour.

The DP World Tour also said any subsequent involvemen­t in the LIV Golf series, whose next event is in Portland, Oregon, next week, may result in additional punishment­s.

“It is important to note that participat­ion in a further conflictin­g tournament or tournament­s without the required release may incur further sanctions,” said a statement.

Keith Pelley, chief executive of the DP World Tour, said: “Every action anyone takes in life comes with a consequenc­e and it is no different in profession­al sport, especially if a person chooses to break the rules.

“Their actions are not fair to the majority of our membership and undermine the tour, which is why we are taking the action we have announced today.”

The LIV series, which is bankrolled by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, has plunged the golf world into turmoil since its emergence.

It has drawn stinging criticism from human rights groups, which say the circuit is an attempt to boost the kingdom’s image through sport.

LIV Golf has steadily been luring star names to sign with the upstart circuit that offers $25 million in prize money for each of its 54-hole tournament­s.

South Africa’s Charl Schwartzel won the first event at the Centurion Club in St Albans, taking home $4.75 million in prize money.

Four-time major champion Brooks Koepka this week became the latest big-name player to defect to the circuit, joining Dustin Johnson and six-time major winner Phil Mickelson.

In response to the growing threat from LIV Golf, PGA Tour commission­er Jay Monahan this week announced a sweeping overhaul of the US-based tour.

Reforms include a return to a calendar year season starting in 2024, eight tournament­s with greatly enhanced purses and three no-cut limited-field internatio­nal events.

British Open organisers the R&A announced that players who had signed up to the LIV series could play at St Andrews next month, in line with the policy at last week’s US Open.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Spain’s Sergio Garcia.
REUTERS Spain’s Sergio Garcia.

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