The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Johnson is the biggest name to join LIV Golf – and risk rap from PGA

McIlroy empathises but he won’t join ‘sportswash­ers’

- PHIL CASEY

Dustin Johnson will play in the opening event of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Invitation­al Series next week in Hertfordsh­ire – with Rory McIlroy admitting he understand­s the lure.

Former world No. 1 Johnson will headline the new competitio­n’s inaugural event at the Centurion Club from June 9-11, just four months after committing himself to the PGA Tour.

Johnson, world number 13, is the biggest name so far to announce he will take part and risks sanctions by the PGA, which has not granted its members permission to play.

The 37-year-old American’s agent David Winkle said in a statement: “Dustin has been contemplat­ing the opportunit­y off-and-on for the past couple of years.

“Ultimately, he decided it was in his and his family’s best interest to pursue it. Dustin has never had any issue with the PGA Tour and is grateful for all it has given him, but in the end he felt this was too compelling to pass up.”

McIlroy sympathise­d with those who have been criticised for supporting the breakaway tour.

“You know, you have some guys in a position where like they are literally not guaranteed a job next year,” he said.

“As we’ve seen, it’s a young man’s game nowadays. So someone that isn’t guaranteed their Tour card next year, another entity comes along and says, we’ll guarantee you this amount for three years, plus you’re playing for a ton more prize money, and you’re playing less events, you can spend more time with your family.

“I mean, whenever you sit down and look at some of those things, you know, it’s very appealing to some of those guys that are in that position.

“Again, I’m not in that position and it’s not something that I would do. But you know, you at least have to try to put yourself in other people’s shoes and see where they are coming from.”

The winner at the Centurion Club will receive £3million out of a total prize fund of £20m and Johnson will join the likes of Louis Oosthuizen, Branden Grace, Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Sergio Garcia, Kevin Na, Martin Kaymer and Graeme McDowell in a 48man field.

Johnson had been scheduled to play in the Canadian Open, which also starts next week, but will now line up in the first of eight new worldwide LIV Series events to be held from June to October.

His decision is in conflict with the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), which is one of his sponsors as well as the title partner of the Canadian Open.

RBC said in a statement that it was “extremely disappoint­ed” in Johnson’s decision but added: “We wish him well.”

LIV Golf chief executive Greg Norman has been heavily criticised for heading up the breakaway tour, with its Saudi investors accused of “sportswash­ing” their country’s poor human rights record.

But Norman said: “Free agency has finally come to golf. This is an opportunit­y to start a movement that will change the course of history by bringing new and open competitio­n to the sport we all love.

“The desire shown by the players to participat­e in LIV Golf demonstrat­es their emphatic belief in our model and confidence in what we’re building for the future.”

The LIV Golf Series will adopt a new format in a bid to make the sport more exciting for fans, with 12 teams of four players contesting in each threeround event to determine team and individual winners.

Former US Open champion McDowell said it had been a “very difficult decision” to commit to the LIV series, but it was the “right decision for me and my family”.

The Northern Irishman told National Club Golfer website: “If we do get banned from the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour, for example, is that good for the sport golf ?

“I believe it’s not good for the game and I really feel what the guys at LIV have done is they’ve tried to create a schedule which especially fits around the PGA Tour.

“It’s designed to co-exist with the other tours in the world and let’s just hope that it all works out. The unknowns are a little scary, but I’m sure it’s weighed into the decision of every player that’s decided to take the leap. And we just hope that the right decision will be made.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal UK chief executive Sacha Deshmukh said the human rights group was “not telling golfers to boycott this tournament”, but that it was a bid by the Saudi authoritie­s to distract from their human rights record.

Deshmukh added: “Saudi Arabia’s persecuted human rights community will feel bitterly disappoint­ed if well-paid golfing superstars take the LIV Golf cash but stay silent about what’s happening in Saudi Arabia.”

DP World Tour declined to comment on any possible sanctions for players who compete at Centurion.

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 ?? ?? HIGH PROFILE: Dustin Johnson cites family reasons for joining the controvers­ial LIV Golf series.
HIGH PROFILE: Dustin Johnson cites family reasons for joining the controvers­ial LIV Golf series.
 ?? ?? McIlroy “understand­s” but he’s not interested in playing the LIV Golf series.
McIlroy “understand­s” but he’s not interested in playing the LIV Golf series.

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