The Press

LIV officials invited to Masters amid talk of thaw

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LIV Golf representa­tives have been invited to the Masters for the first time, highlighti­ng the thawing of tensions in the game’s great split.

LIV chief executive Greg Norman is not expected to appear and it remains up in the air whether Yasir Al-Rumayyan – the LIV chairman and governor of the £600billion Saudi Public Investment Fund which bankrolls the breakaway league – will attend.

However, it is understood that at least one high-ranking LIV official will be under the famous oak tree in front of the clubhouse, where the sport’s power-brokers assemble.

It will be a symbolic moment with the PIF negotiatio­ns with the PGA Tour continuing in the background. Initially, Augusta National was resistant to LIV, but since the Tour announced its “framework agreement” with PIF last summer, there has been a more conciliato­ry tone from the majors.

Hostilitie­s reached such highs that for the previous two editions, Augusta revoked the invite to the chief executive of the Asian Tour, simply because he signed a £200 million 10-year deal with Golf Saudi. But Cho Minn Thant is back in the fold and has accepted the reinstated invite.

Of course, Jon Rahm, the reigning Masters champion, is a recent LIV capture having jumped ship for an upfront fee believed to be £400 million. The Spaniard was always critical of LIV’s 54-hole format and has been honest enough to confirm to the BBC that he still holds this opinion. Furthermor­e, the Spaniard believes a switch to the traditiona­l format could assist in the negotiatio­ns.

“If there ever was a way where LIV could go to 72 holes I think it would help all of this argument a lot,” he said. “The closer I think we can get LIV Golf to some other things the better. I think it would be for some kind of unificatio­n to feed into a world tour or something like that. I don’t know if I’m alone in this, but I definitely wouldn’t mind going back to 72 holes.”

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