The Guardian (USA)

‘In the dark’: Golfers send lawyer’s letter to PGA Tour demanding transparen­cy

- Ewan Murray

Lawyers representi­ng 21 golfers, including the former Masters champion Danny Willett, have written to the PGA Tour to demand “full disclosure” on ongoing negotiatio­ns aimed at securing the organisati­on’s future. The sport remains mired in civil war, and dissatisfi­ed low ranking players claim they have been “kept in the dark about this process.”

The PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund remain locked in talks aimed at launching a new, collective future for elite golf by a proposed deadline of 31 December. It is likely that cutoff will be pushed back. The Fenway Sports Group, owner of Liverpool FC, is now a key part of those discussion­s as it hopes to invest in the new business model. It is expected Fenway, which saw off a challenge from another US-based private equity group to gain approval from the PGA Tour’s board, would work in collaborat­ion with the PIF.

The rank and file, though, appear unimpresse­d. A letter from the New

York law firm Susman Godfrey to the PGA Tour board seeks to “obtain informatio­n about the PGA Tour’s considerat­ion of several proposals that will alter the structure of the PGA Tour and may have a profound impact on our clients’ lives and the lives and livelihood­s of hundreds of other tour players”.

In a swipe at the decision-making process, it adds: “The board has recently received multiple bids by prospectiv­e capital partners that will potentiall­y transform how the PGA Tour operates, who controls it and who owns it.

“All but a handful of PGA Tour players have been kept entirely in the dark about the prospectiv­e transactio­n, how it will impact them, and what conflicts of interests may impact the decisionma­kers. We demand full disclosure of the details and analyses of any proposals by prospectiv­e capital partners, which should be shared properly with all tour players.”

Willett has joined the likes of Dylan Frittelli, Lanto Griffin, Grayson Murray, Scott Piercy and James Hahn in putting his name to the correspond­ence. Hahn was once a member of the PGA Tour’s policy board. Wesley Bryan, another signatory, posted on social media on Tuesday that he is “not confident in how things have been handled by the organisati­on which I ‘work for.’” Whether golfers are employees or independen­t contractor­s has always been a point for debate.

The board currently includes Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth and Patrick Cantlay. Rory McIlroy stepped back from his own directorsh­ip role last month, citing time constraint­s.

The legal letter demands “a meeting with independen­t directors on the policy board to understand the process that has been followed and will be followed going forward.” It adds: “Importantl­y, we seek assurances that all conflicts of interest will be disclosed.”

 ?? Photograph: David Davies/PA ?? John Rahm is the latest player to join the Saudi-funded LIV Golf series.
Photograph: David Davies/PA John Rahm is the latest player to join the Saudi-funded LIV Golf series.

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