Dayton Daily News

LIV Golf faces hurdles in applying for world ranking points

- By Doug Ferguson

Even as the second LIV Golf Invitation­al series embarks on the first of four consecutiv­e events in the United States, an important part of its future takes place in Scotland in two weeks.

The Official World Golf Ranking governing board meets at St. Andrews during the British Open, followed by a meeting of the OWGR’s technical committee. The agenda is likely to include whether the Saudi-funded league of 48-man fields in 54-hole events should get ranking points.

That assumes LIV Golf ’s applicatio­n to be part of the OWGR system is received by then.

Greg Norman, who runs LIV Golf, already has suggested that PGA Tour Commission­er Jay Monahan recuse himself from the decision. Monahan is part of the eight-member panel that includes executives from the European tour, PGA of America, USGA, R&A, Augusta National and the Internatio­nal Federation of PGA Tours. The board is chaired by former R&A chief Peter Dawson.

But there are a few potential bumps in the guidelines for prospectiv­e newcomers.

One is that every tournament be contested over at least 54 holes with a 36-hole cut or be in line with eligible formats. LIV Golf has no cut.

The OWGR guidelines indicate a standard format of 72 holes, with 54 holes acceptable “for those tournament­s earnings fewer than 12 minimum first-place points.”

Guidelines also state that tournament­s must average a 75-man field over the course of the season. This could be a problem for a circuit that promotes 48-man fields. LIV Golf has invested $300 million into the Asian Tour and has four “Internatio­nal Series” tournament­s this year. It could claim those fields as part of its league and reach the minimum.

Perhaps the biggest hurdle is a requiremen­t that a new tour comply with the guidelines for at least one year before it gets admitted. LIV Golf has altered or delayed plans for a full schedule and set teams, and providing stability could be key in gaining approval.

Of course, the OWGR handbook also says the board can admit or reject any new tour regardless of compliance and change criteria at its discretion. That’s a lot of gray.

And then if LIV Golf does get accepted, still looming is a change to the OWGR ranking formula that starts in August, before LIV’s fourth event.

The new system will determine the strength of field using a calculatio­n based on a statistica­l evaluation of every player in the field, not just those among the current 200 in the world. Gone will be the minimum points awarded to various tours.

The Portland field has 13 players outside the top 200.

Meanwhile, Ian Poulter comes into the Portland event at No. 96 and risks falling out of the top 100 for the first time in five years. Lee Westwood is at No. 87. Both are in the British Open. Without ranking points, they won’t be eligible for majors going forward without open qualifying.

Uncertain times

Ernie Els and Jim Furyk are not candidates to join the Saudi-funded LIV Golf series. They’re still concerned about where golf is headed, particular­ly how a boost in prize money on the PGA Tour might affect the PGA Tour Champions.

“I guess we missed the boat, and that’s really sad for some of these guys, because these guys have supported these tours all of their careers, in some cases close to 40 years,” Els said. “We’d like to see our Champions Tour grow. We’ve got great sponsorshi­ps, good support, but it’s scary times for a lot of people.”

Furyk is No. 4 on the career PGA Tour money list at just over $71 million. He trails Dustin Johnson, who no longer is listed because he resigned his membership to join LIV Golf.

“That’s where I played my career, made my living. That’s where my heart is. So I have concerns,” Furyk said. “Then, yeah, kind of a trickle-down effect. How does that affect us from PGA Tour Champions and the over-50 crowd? I feel like we’re in a really good place right now.”

Open qualifying

Among the criteria to be exempt for the British Open is to be among the leading five players not already eligible from the top 20 in the FedEx Cup through the Travelers Championsh­ip.

The top 20 players already are exempt.

Those five spots presumably are relegated to the reserves, which is based on the world ranking, and the list could be long. Going into the final two weeks, 118 players have earned a spot at St. Andrews.

Ten more spots are awarded through top finishers in the Irish Open (three), John Deere Classic (three), Scottish Open (three) and Barbasol Championsh­ip (one). The R&A added one extra spot to its four regional qualifiers for a total of 16 spots available.

That would bring the total to 144 players. Aaron Wise at No. 45 is a lock to get in off the reserve list. He’s currently followed in the world ranking (of those not already exempt) by Brian Harman (No. 49), Sebastian Munoz (No. 50), Sepp Straka (No. 55) and Luke List (No. 60).

The next world ranking is what is used for the reserve list for The Open.

Langer streak

Jack Nicklaus and Bernhard Langer each made it to their 14th full season on the senior circuit before finally missing the cut in a major.

But there are a few difference­s.

There were only four majors for Nicklaus — the Senior British Open wasn’t part of the PGA Tour Champions schedule until 2002. Plus, the Golden Bear was still playing the regular majors until his streak of 146 consecutiv­e majors ended at the 1998 British Open.

He went 46 senior majors until missing the cut at Aronimink in the 2003 PGA Championsh­ip.

Langer is in is 14th year on the PGA Tour Champions and went 64 consecutiv­e majors — all but the Tradition and Seniors Player Championsh­ip have a cut — before he missed by two shots at the U.S. Senior Open last week.

 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT/AP ?? LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman watches on a tee box at the final round of the inaugural LIV Golf Invitation­al at the Centurion Club in St. Albans, England, on June 11.
ALASTAIR GRANT/AP LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman watches on a tee box at the final round of the inaugural LIV Golf Invitation­al at the Centurion Club in St. Albans, England, on June 11.

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