Vancouver Sun

Strong LIV contingent on hand for Asian Tour competitio­n in Oman

Internatio­nal Series events offer players chances to earn world ranking points

- DOUG FERGUSON

LOS ANGELES Joaquin Niemann, Matthew Wolff and Louis Oosthuizen will give the Asian Tour field in Oman a familiar look. Missing will be the uniforms and team scores.

They are among 21 players from Saudi-funded LIV Golf who are playing the first Internatio­nal Series events on the Asian Tour. The series is funded by LIV Golf and features a US$2-million purse, and this one comes a week before LIV goes to Saudi Arabia and Hong Kong.

Some LIV players are under contract to play in occasional Internatio­nal Series events. For others, it's a rare chance to earn world ranking points. The Official World Golf Ranking doesn't award points to the league that has the same 53 players for the entire season (13 four-man teams and Hudson Swafford as a singles player).

It's still not enough to get any of them — particular­ly Lucas Herbert (No. 80) or Niemann (No. 81) — into the top 50 for the Masters. But the PGA Championsh­ip has a history of trying to get as many from the top 100 in the world ranking.

As for the other majors, David Puig earned a spot in the British Open last week when he won the Malaysian Open, part of the Internatio­nal Final Qualifying series. He is the third player to qualify for Royal Troon this summer through the series, following Niemann (Australian Open) and Dean Burmester (Joburg Open).

Puig and Sam Horsfield were the only players in Malaysia. Puig also is in Oman this week, meaning four straight weeks of playing. That's not unusual for players on any circuit, so it raises questions about why more LIV golfers did not seize on the opportunit­y. That was their best option for those who are not European tour members. Otherwise, it's final qualifying in the United Kingdom on July 2.

The U.S. Open typically takes the top 60 in the world toward the end of May, and that will make the Masters and PGA Championsh­ip critical for Adrian Meronk (No. 49 and falling), along with Niemann and Burmester, just as much as how they fare in Oman.

WALK AND TALK

The networks have gone to a “walk and talk” with players on the weekend dating to last year, and Jim Nantz at CBS knew which button to push when he got Mackenzie Hughes of Canada signed up for the chat on Saturday at Riviera.

Hughes delivered one of the most reasoned interviews of the year at Kapalua when he talked about how much golf has emphasized money. He also spoke during Pebble Beach at a private function, which prompted Nantz to ask Hughes to share his views:

“I just think that it's kind of unfortunat­e where we are in the game right now, where it seems that it's just all about the money, it's all about, `How much money can I make?' Kind of lost the spirit of the game in the process,” Hughes said. “The reason I play the PGA Tour wasn't because I wanted to make a million dollars. I wanted to compete against the best players in the world, make an impact on the communitie­s that we play. That's been the dream since I was a kid. It seems that some guys have lost a little sight of that.

“Now we're in a place where I think fans are just generally a little bit kind of fed up with it, to be honest. Those are the people that drive our sport. So I'd love to appeal to the masses a lot more and certainly the way we're going right now to me isn't quite it.”

MONEY MATTERS

The lucrative new PGA Tour already has had three $20-million tournament­s and the other four tournament­s have had an average purse of $8.6 million.

That translates into 12 players already at $2 million or more before the PGA Tour even gets to the Florida swing, and seven of them haven't won yet. Through seven tournament­s, 30 players already have cleared the $1 million mark.

Twenty-five years ago, only nine players surpassed $2 million for the entire season.

AUGUSTA CHANGES

Augusta National has lengthened the course again — this time by a whopping 10 yards.

The club released its media guide for the 2024 Masters on Monday, and the only change to the course was a tee box on the par-5 second hole that is 10 yards back and to the left.

The hole now plays 585 yards. It ranked as the easiest hole last year, and cumulative­ly has been ranked the second-easiest hole behind the par-5 13th.

 ?? CHRIS TROTMAN/LIV GOLF VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Joaquin Niemann is in Oman for this week's Asian Tour Internatio­nal Series event. The Chilean golfer is among 21 players from Saudi-funded LIV Golf playing on the Asian Tour, which provides a rare opportunit­y to earn world ranking points.
CHRIS TROTMAN/LIV GOLF VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Joaquin Niemann is in Oman for this week's Asian Tour Internatio­nal Series event. The Chilean golfer is among 21 players from Saudi-funded LIV Golf playing on the Asian Tour, which provides a rare opportunit­y to earn world ranking points.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada