The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Senate opens inquiry into PGA Tour deal with LIV

- By Kevin Draper and Alan Blinder

The PGA Tour and LIV Golf have not yet closed a stunning partnershi­p agreement announced only last week, but vows from Washington to slow or stop the deal — or at least make it uncomforta­ble for golf executives — crystalliz­ed on Monday, when the Senate opened an inquiry into the arrangemen­t.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-conn., the chair of the chamber’s Permanent Subcommitt­ee on Investigat­ions, said Monday that he had demanded that both the PGA Tour and the Saudi Arabian-funded LIV give up a wide array of documents and communicat­ions tied to the agreement. Blumenthal also asked for records related to the PGA Tour’s nonprofit status, suggesting an appetite to challenge the tour’s tax-exempt standing.

In a statement issued three days before the start of the U.S. Open in Los Angeles, Blumenthal decried Saudi Arabia’s “deeply disturbing human rights record at home and abroad” and said the agreement raised concerns “about the Saudi government’s role in influencin­g this effort and the risks posed by a foreign government entity assuming control over a cherished American institutio­n.”

LIV declined to comment on Monday, and the PGA Tour did not immediatel­y respond to an inquiry. Executives had signaled, though, that they expected their agreement to attract sustained attention from the federal government.

Congress cannot block the agreement simply by opening an investigat­ion, and any legislatio­n to derail the deal would most likely provoke a court challenge. But the specter of congressio­nal scrutiny and, perhaps, public hearings could tarnish the deal and make the months ahead even more unpleasant for the leaders of profession­al golf.

Blumenthal has shown a willingnes­s to spar with sports leaders. Lately, he has pressed American universiti­es for informatio­n about their sports betting partnershi­ps, and he has lashed NCAA leadership for years over conditions for college athletes.

Although the planned deal has caused some heartburn and saber-rattling on Capitol Hill, Congress has not shown unanimous interest in haranguing golf leaders over it. Sen. Ron Johnson, R-wis., the ranking minority member on the panel that Blumenthal chairs, said last week that Congress should stay out of sports.

The PGA Tour’s agreement with the Saudi Public Investment Fund, whose LIV circuit made its debut last year, would bring the business dealings of the rival tours into a new company. The PGA Tour commission­er, Jay Monahan, is in line to serve as its chief executive, and Yasir al-rumayyan, the wealth fund’s governor, will be its chair.

Under the terms of the agreement, the Saudi wealth fund will have exclusive rights to invest in the new company, positionin­g it for significan­t influence over golf’s financial future. PGA Tour officials have insisted, to widespread doubts, that they will be the ultimate decision makers because their allies will hold a majority of the new company’s board seats.

Profession­al golf attracted the gaze of Washington regulators before last week’s announceme­nt. Antitrust investigat­ors from the Justice Department have spent months asking questions about the tour’s efforts to deter player defections to LIV and examining whether the tour’s top leaders were too close to other prominent golf organizati­ons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States