San Antonio Express-News

PGA’S plan against LIV plays out in L.A.

- By Steve Henson

LOS ANGELES — Riv not LIV is the mantra this week at the Genesis Invitation­al.

LIV Golf is the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and financiall­y supported by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. Its first tournament of 2023 will be at the El Camaleón Golf Course in Mayakoba, Mexico, next week and its golfers include last year’s Genesis winner, Joaquin Niemann.

Riv is a favored diminutive for Riviera Country Club, the venerable Pacific Palisades par-71 layout playing host to this week’s PGA Tour event that will include every golfer in the top 25 except Niemann and Cameron Smith, another LIV defector.

It also will include Tiger Woods, a surprise entry. Woods is a staunch PGA Tour supporter who has worked with Rory Mcilroy and others for a year to combat LIV.

“It’s been very turbulent . ... It’s been difficult, there’s no lie,” Woods said. “We never would have expected the game of golf to be in this situation, but it is, that’s the reality.

“Obviously, (LIV} is a competitiv­e organizati­on trying to create their best product they possibly can, and we’re trying to create the best product that we think is the future of golf, how it should be played. How do we do that? We’re still working on that.”

The threat of LIV seems to thread nearly every

conversati­on. Here is a deeper dive into that battle as well as other frontburne­r topics this week at Riviera.

PGA strategy vs. LIV

The new PGA Tour schedule has elevated tournament­s with bigger purses, creating incentive for the best golfers to resist defecting to cashflush LIV. The purse at the Genesis Invitation­al — one of 13 elevated events in 2023 — has increased from $12 million to $20 million and the combined purse for the elevated events is $315 million, up nearly 50 percent from

last year’s $214.7 million.

Some of the designated events could change next year. The WM Phoenix Open, RBC Heritage, Wells Fargo Championsh­ip and Travelers Championsh­ip are not guaranteed to be designated in 2024, although the Genesis Invitation­al seems on solid footing.

LIV Golf was a hot topic at last year’s Genesis Invitation­al because comments Phil Mickelson made criticizin­g the PGA Tour and professing his devotion to the upstart organizati­on became public. Many PGA players slammed Mickelson.

Scottie Scheffler, the No. 1 player in the Official World Golf Rankings and winner of last week’s WM Phoenix Open, hopes this week’s conversati­ons center around Riv, not LIV.

“I felt like last year there was so much talk surroundin­g LIV at this event,” he said. “This year I feel like we’re kind of more settled into the ecosystem of golf. I think our tour’s doing a good job of improving and continuing to benefit the top players and all across the board.

“Last year it was a lot of drama, it was like who’s going to go, I’m not going, now this guy’s going, and it’s like all this stuff is going on around us and was kind of hard to focus on the tournament. Now I feel like we’ve settled in a bit but it’s still weird that certain guys aren’t here.”

Riviera vs. Tiger

Woods grew up in Cypress, roughly an hour’s drive from Riviera. His dad took him to tournament­s at the course when he was a child. He made his PGA Tour debut as a 16-year-old amateur at the 1992 L.A. Open at Riviera and missed the cut by six strokes.

He’s made 13 tour starts at the course since. He was runner-up in 1999, one of three top-10 finishes, and 22 of his 42 rounds have been under par. But he’s never won.

The last time he played the course, he tied for 68th in 2020, finishing last among those who made the cut.

Players vs. weather

Winds of about 15 mph made temperatur­es during Wednesday morning practice rounds feel like 40 degrees. But it doesn’t appear that a repeat of the miserable third round at the 2021 Genesis Invitation­al is in store.

Officials were forced to suspend play that day after marked balls rolled off most of the greens because of high winds that reached 35 mph.

The forecast for the next four days calls for winds under 10 mph. Morning rounds will remain chilly, with temperatur­es in the high 40s and 50s.

One golfer with no complaints is Tom Kim, the 20-year-old South Korean rising star who already has two tour victories. Kim attended the Genesis Invitation­al in 2020 as a fan and played Riviera for the first time last week.

“I actually first took a look at this course last week,” Kim said. “I came over for a trip and I played 18 holes and I played nine (Tuesday). I think this place is very magical. The course is in great shape and I think it’s a very special place.”

The favorites

The hot hands so far in 2023 are present and oozing confidence, including Scheffler, Mcilroy, Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas, Jason Day, Tony Finau and Sam Burns. Adam Scott is the Genesis Invitation­al all-time earnings leader.

Sleepers? How about Keegan Bradley for his ability with short irons and improving putting. Or streaky Taylor Moore, who has finished in the top 15 in his last three tournament­s. Or maybe Wyndham Clark.

Woods — who naturally is a sentimenta­l pick to at least make the cut — likes Viktor Hovland, a Norwegian who has finished tied for fourth and fifth in two starts on the American mainland.

“The sky’s the limit for Viktor, the way he drives it, he doesn’t really have any weaknesses in the game,” Woods said. “And then his fitness, he works very hard at getting explosiven­ess and endurance.”

 ?? Ryan Kang/associated Press ?? Tiger Woods plays in the pro-am Wednesday at chilly Riviera in preparatio­n for one of the PGA Tour’s designated events with a big purse and star-studded field.
Ryan Kang/associated Press Tiger Woods plays in the pro-am Wednesday at chilly Riviera in preparatio­n for one of the PGA Tour’s designated events with a big purse and star-studded field.

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