The Guardian (USA)

‘Everyone is against us’: Talor Gooch speaks up as LIV players surge at Open

- Michael Butler at St Andrews

There may have been plenty of chatter on the eve of the Open from the R&A and Tiger Woods about LIV golfers being driven by money and turning their back on the sport, but it does not seem to have distracted any converts to the Saudi-run tour at St Andrews.

One LIV defector, Abraham Ancer, insisted there was “a really cool camaraderi­e between us” after finishing day two on five under, while Talor Gooch, tucked neatly behind the leaders on seven under par, went even further: “Everybody, it feels like, is against us, and that’s OK. It’s kind of banded us together, I think.”

Not that Gooch speaks for all the LIV-ers. The Oklahoma native, 30, is developing a bit of a habit in that regard, after comparing his recent team win at the LIV event in Portland to competing in a Ryder Cup or a Presidents Cup, comments that even made Dustin Johnson – his LIV teammate and someone who has actually competed in those two competitio­ns – laugh. “A bunch of players came up, and they’re like really? Really?” explained Gooch on Friday. “I was like, hold on a second, guys. Give me a little break. I just won [the team event]. I was in the moment. I might have gotten a little aggressive with the comments.”

“I watch F1,” Gooch continued. “I was so pumped to be able to spray champagne like they do in F1. I was in the moment. Maybe a little aggressive of a comment. Rightfully so, I’ve taken a little bit of heat for it.”

Johnson, who lies nine under par here after an impressive second-round 67 on the Old Course, has chosen a different tack. When asked if he feels galvanised by the comments against LIV in the last few weeks, the two-time major champion simply responded: “I don’t really know what you’re talking about.” Instead, Johnson seems to be choosing to ignore the noise. “I don’t read anything”, he said. “So I wouldn’t know what you were saying or if there was anything negative being said. It doesn’t bother me because obviously, everyone has their own opinion and I have mine, and the only one I care about is mine.”

Whether this is a coordinate­d tactic or not, this sudden aversion to reading appears to be a strategy employed by other LIV golfers who are going well at St Andrews. Ian Poulter, at three under, announced he “purposely hasn’t looked” at the R&A’s comments. “I don’t want to know. You can tell me, I’m not going to listen. I’m here to play golf,” he said. Sergio García, who rocketed up the leaderboar­d with a 66 on Friday, simply deadpanned to reporters: “I don’t know how to read any more.”

Whatever the gameplan is, it seems to be working. A strong LIV contingent is converging behind second-round leader Cameron Smith, and while the R&A will not publicly admit it, it will be uneasy at the possibilit­y of handing the Claret Jug over to a member of golf’s new world order on Sunday in the most historic of settings.

 ?? Photograph: Robert Perry/EPA ?? Talor Gooch is one of a number of golfers from the breakaway LIV Tour that are lurking on the leaderboar­d at St Andrews.
Photograph: Robert Perry/EPA Talor Gooch is one of a number of golfers from the breakaway LIV Tour that are lurking on the leaderboar­d at St Andrews.
 ?? ?? Dustin Johnson has claimed he ‘doesn’t read’ negative comments about the Saudibacke­d LIV tour. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/ The Guardian
Dustin Johnson has claimed he ‘doesn’t read’ negative comments about the Saudibacke­d LIV tour. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/ The Guardian

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