The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Pelley reveals Tour link was chosen over rival

- STEVE SCOTT

The European Tour’s new “strategic alliance” with the PGA Tour is not a merger, stressed chief executive Keith Pelley, and was preferred to an offer from the people behind the proposed Premier Golf League.

Yesterday’s announceme­nt of the new partnershi­p between golf ’s leading profession­al tours – which Pe l l e y said had been hammered out in the last 72 hours – is short on real detail, but will involve the PGA Tour taking out a minority stake in European Tour Production­s – the Tour’s in-house TV company – while the US Tour ’s commission­er Jay Monahan will join the European Tour board as a non-executive director.

The standardis­ation of the global calendar for elite profession­al golf would appear to be one aim of the partnershi­p, as well as joint moves in commercial and TV rights in global markets.

But Pelley did admit that this deal with the PGA Tour had been preferred over a counter- offer from the Raine Group, the private equity firm behind the proposed Premier Golf League, a rival circuit financed largely by money from Saudi Arabia.

The chief executive was at pains to stress that this was not a merger or takeover and the European To u r was not under financial pressure to accept the input from America – although there is no reciprocal stake or board presence from Europe into the PGA Tour.

He said: “Let me be perfectly clear: we did not have to enter into this agreement or any other. We chose to because it’s in the best interest of both tours, for our players, for both golf fans and for the global profession­al game.”

Pelley said he had seen assertions that a takeover of the European Tour by the PGA To u r was “inevitable” which he said was “staggering and simply wrong”.

“If this was a financial situation we’d have done far more than a strategic alliance with a minority investment,” he said.

“Categorica­lly we are not in financial difficulti­es, that is simply wrong, we are in robust financial health with a strong balance sheet, the strongest ever, and a very strong network of partners.

“We created 15 tournament­s from scratch this year (because of Covid19) while founding a £3 million health strategy – I don’t think that it would be possible for a business that did not have robust finances.”

Pelley added that what had been an ongoing discussion about greater collaborat­ion between the tours had been accelerate­d by greater co- operation during the pandemic.

“Jay and I have been talking about working more closely for five and a half years,” he said. “I always said golf is fractured, too fractured, this was just a moment in time when everything aligned.

“Covid has brought challenges but also opportunit­ies. We’ve spent more time talking and less time travelling, and we started sharing best practices, or chief medical o ff i c e r s h av e been in constant dialogue and conversati­ons on how we should work together.

“We’r e in this game together, and Covid showed we shouldn’t be competing against each other, we should be working together and aggregatin­g our skills, best practices and commercial streams.

“This alliance is the logical next step in a move toward a global golf game.”

Pelley couldn’t enter into a ny detail about how greater p lay ing opportunit­ies for players on both tours would manifest itself, but it seems clear the European Tour’s gradual shift of its biggest events to later in the year will be imbedded further.

The possibilit­y of FedEx Cup points being available to the larger European Tour events in the Rolex Series is one possibilit­y, which might result in a greater number of European stars and US players competing in championsh­ips like the Scottish and Irish Opens, Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and the BMW Championsh­ip at Wentworth.

It does appear, however, that the presence of the Raine Group and their offer to the European Tour – presumably along the lines of their proposed “new world” of golf, with top players playing limitedfie­ld events for huge prizefunds in a team environmen­t similar to F1 – accelerate­d the deal with the PGA Tour.

“Raine Capital presented a very compelling offer to take the European Tour to another level but in a different direction,” said Pelley.

“Ultimately we felt partnering with the PGA Tour was the best option for our members and for global golf.”

He declined to explain the bones of that offer, but said the Raine Group “were very profession­al during our conversati­ons and I have the utmost respect for them”.

 ??  ?? ROBUST FINANCIAL HEALTH: Keith Pelley insists there was no pressure to accept the input from the PGA Tour.
ROBUST FINANCIAL HEALTH: Keith Pelley insists there was no pressure to accept the input from the PGA Tour.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom