The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Golf’s $800 million man says PGA Tour is greedy

- By Jim Litke PHIL MICKELSON

Phil Mickelson just ripped the PGA Tour for what he called “obnoxious greed.”

Now that — pardon the expression — is rich.

“I know I will be criticized,” Mickelson said earlier this week, soon after arriving in the golf-forsaken Saudi Arabian metropolis of King Abdullah Economic City — you cannot make this stuff up — to play in the Saudi Internatio­nal.

“That’s not my concern,” Mickelson added. “All that would do is dumb down one of the most intricate issues in sport.”

Actually, it’s not that intricate. It’s just another attempt at a cash grab. If you remember the mercifully brief crashand-burn experiment run by a handful of top European soccer teams to create a breakaway league and keep the lion’s share of the receipts last spring, you’re pretty much up to speed.

In this instance, though, it’s former golfer Greg Norman trying to establish an Asian Tour to rival the PGA Tour after bombing with the same concept nearly 20 years ago. This time, though, Norman has pumped $300 million into the venture through his LIV Golf Investment­s, which in turn is funded primarily by Saudis sovereign wealth fund. And the sheiks willing to dole out the money are a lot less interested in golf than they are in cleaning up their image as routinely ruthless violators of human rights.

We’ll get to exactly what got Phil’s dander up in a moment (but here’s a hint: money, money, money and more money). Just know that Lefty’s net worth is at least $800 million as you read this, and climbing.

He pilots his own jet, owns a Bentley, an Aston Martin, a mansion in California with a three-hole putting course and is building an even bigger mansion in Florida, apparently to avoid paying state income tax.

But what if the PGA Tour didn’t exist when Mickelson joined in 1992, and just as important, Tiger Woods didn’t show up four years after that? Well, it might be a very different story.

Instead, it was the flush Phil who soon after his arrival in Saudi Arabia pocketed an appearance fee that once would have qualified as a “king’s ransom” but could be

more accurately described these days as a “sultan’s bribe.”

Lefty shot 2-over and was tied for 53rd after the opening round. Small wonder. He was probably still steamed about the PGA Tour controllin­g the players’ media rights. If nothing else, he contended just the threat of top players defecting to a rival league would give them more leverage to bargain.

But what about those sublime golf skills Mickelson spent a lifetime honing? Shouldn’t that be leverage enough? Without the PGA Tour, sure, those would be great for taking $100 bills off his pals every weekend down at the local country club. And good as Mickelson is, he probably could have taken his hustle on the road like old-timers Lee Trevino and Raymond Floyd. Both pocketed plenty of money playing in winner-take-all matches at private clubs, but neither saw a paycheck with six figures on it until they took their talents out on the PGA Tour.

 ?? AP 2021 ?? Phil Mickelson, giving the thumbs-up after winning the PGA Championsh­ip last year, criticized the PGA Tour over the way it handles players’ media rights.
AP 2021 Phil Mickelson, giving the thumbs-up after winning the PGA Championsh­ip last year, criticized the PGA Tour over the way it handles players’ media rights.

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