The Hamilton Spectator

McIlroy and Monahan have trust issues in the sport’s big divide

Opinion of players varies on ultimate outcome of deal with Saudi group

- DOUG FERGUSON

The obnoxious money ruining golf was sure to create trust issues with the leadership, and that lingers even as PGA Tour Enterprise­s is now flush with cash from its new minority investor.

Now, it might be a question of who has lost the locker-room: Jay Monahan or Rory McIlroy?

How much Monahan has fallen out of favour as commission­er depends on who gets asked. The Associated Press spoke with 22 players during the Hawaii swing and their opinions were as varied as their status on tour.

Most — not all — said the outcome of any deal probably would affect how they felt about Monahan staying in his job.

The first part of the deal — maybe the only part if the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia loses interest — was announced last Wednesday, worth up to $3 billion (U.S.). Half of that is geared toward equity ownership for the players. Still to come are the details. Keep in mind, players are still reeling from Monahan’s secret deal with PIF — the financial lifeline of LIV Golf — that was announced June 6 and floored them after so much anti-LIV rhetoric. Word is it even left Jordan Spieth speechless.

That was followed by six months of players feeling they were left in the dark on the negotiatio­ns with PIF and private equity groups.

“If the deal comes through and people are happy, there will be probably more grace for what happened,” Nick Taylor said. “But for what happened (secret negotiatio­ns with PIF), it’s going to take a lot to forget about that. Maybe not forget, but forgive.”

Brian Harman felt Monahan deserved a long rope because of how expertly he guided the PGA Tour in its return from the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I have a lot of confidence in Jay. This has been an incredibly difficult hand he’s been dealt,” Harman said.

McIlroy, for years the loudest critic, is increasing­ly hard to figure. He is as good a speaker as he is a listener. But his views on LIV have been such a U-turn that Rickie Fowler jokingly referred to him as “pulling a PGA Tour.” Double ouch.

McIlroy began to soften his views when Masters champion Jon Rahm — key to European success in the Ryder Cup — bolted to LIV in December. And then to start the year, McIlroy appeared on a popular U.K. soccer podcast and said he has been too judgmental about players going to LIV, and that he was instrument­al in getting PGA Tour leadership to meet with the Saudis. He said he accepted LIV as “part of our sport now.”

But it was at Pebble Beach that McIlroy really raised eyebrows.

It’s clear he wants the fractured landscape put back together as quickly as possible. That remains the biggest sticking point in any deal with PIF and its governor, Yasir Al-Rumayyan, who has referred to LIV Golf as his “baby.”

McIlroy left the PGA Tour board in November and Spieth, a former player director, was chosen to replace him. They are not on the same page on all matters PIF.

Spieth was asked why the tour needs a deal with PIF now that it has a minority investor. “I don’t think it’s needed. I think the positive (of a PIF deal) would be a unificatio­n,” he said.

Spieth told Sports Illustrate­d he called McIlroy last Wednesday, mainly to ask why McIlroy had dropped out of a group text among top players. McIlroy confirmed the hour-long phone call and said while they agree on a lot, he felt PIF with its endless money must be part of any deal if golf is to be pieced back together.

 ?? CHRISTIAN PETERSEN GETTY IMAGES ?? Rory McIlroy, left, talks with Ludvig Aberg during the second round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am at Pebble Beach Golf Links on Friday. It’s clear McIlroy wants the fractured golf landscape put back together as quickly as possible.
CHRISTIAN PETERSEN GETTY IMAGES Rory McIlroy, left, talks with Ludvig Aberg during the second round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am at Pebble Beach Golf Links on Friday. It’s clear McIlroy wants the fractured golf landscape put back together as quickly as possible.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? PGA Tour boss Jay Monahan is on the hot seat with players over secret dealings with LIV reps.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO PGA Tour boss Jay Monahan is on the hot seat with players over secret dealings with LIV reps.

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