San Antonio Express-News

PGA Tour says banned players knew consequenc­es

- By Doug Ferguson

The PGA Tour asked a federal judge in San Francisco to deny the appeal of three suspended players who joined Saudi-backed LIV Golf and now want to compete in the tour’s lucrative postseason, arguing the players knew the consequenc­es two months ago.

Talor Gooch, Matt Jones and Hudson Swafford are seeking a temporary restrainin­g order. They are among 10 players who filed an antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour last week.

The hearing is scheduled for 1 p.m. PDT Tuesday in San Jose, Calif., two days before the first of three Fedex Cup playoff events in the chase for the $18 million top prize.

The Fedex St. Jude

Championsh­ip in Memphis, Tenn., has a $15 million purse, and the top 70 players advance to the second postseason event in Wilmington, Del.

Gooch (No. 20), Jones (No. 65) and Swafford (No. 67) are among nine players who have joined LIV Golf and finished the regular season among the top 125 in the Fedex Cup standings. The other six who joined LIV Golf are not asking to play in the tour’s postseason.

In a court filing Monday to oppose the temporary restrainin­g order, the tour argued antitrust laws do not allow the three players “to have their cake and eat it, too.”

Gooch, Swafford and Jones used the same phrase in separate letters to tour officials last month in protesting their suspension­s

and claiming the regulation­s were onerous and kept them from playing elsewhere.

“I am a free agent and independen­t contractor. The Tour cannot have its cake and eat it too by trying to control me as one might an employee, while not providing me the rights and

benefits an employee would receive,” each letter said.

The PGA Tour argued in its opposing motion, “Despite knowing full well that they would breach TOUR Regulation­s and be suspended for doing so, Plaintiffs have joined competing golf league LIV Golf, which has paid them tens and hundreds of millions of dollars in guaranteed money supplied by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund.”

LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman said in a statement, “I believe players have the right to play when and where they choose so their talents can take them as far and high as possible.”

“I believe all players — whether they choose to play with LIV or the PGA Tour — understand and appreciate the purpose and importance of the players’ legal actions, across the globe,” Norman said. “The PGA Tour is trying to cast this as ‘us’ against ‘them.’ The players know better.”

The three players were not among the highestsou­ght players for Norman’s rival league, though they were among the initial group of players who signed with LIV Golf. Gooch was the only one among the top 50, mainly from his only PGA Tour win last November.

“Plaintiffs have waited nearly two months to seek relief from the Court, fabricatin­g an ‘emergency’ they now maintain requires immediate action,” the filing said. “It doesn’t.”

The tour contends players knew they would be ineligible for the Fedex Cup playoffs “when they accepted millions from LIV to breach their agreements” with the tour.

The LIV Golf events, with a 48-man field, consist of 54 holes and offer $25 million in total prize money for each event. Seventeen players already have earned $1 million or more in three or fewer events.

 ?? Harry How/getty Images ?? Talor Gooch and others have filed a restrainin­g order in hopes of competing in PGA Tour events.
Harry How/getty Images Talor Gooch and others have filed a restrainin­g order in hopes of competing in PGA Tour events.

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