I’ve Lost All Respect For Jon Rahm
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I’ve Lost All Respect For Jon Rahm

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I’ve Lost All Respect For Jon Rahm

There isn’t much life left in LIV.

The writing is on the wall that LIV—which will soon lose funding from Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund—is either going to die after the 2026 season or fade into a much smaller, less disruptive entity.

LIV’s fraudulent business model was completely dependent on grossly overpaying players. All of the potential value was supposed to be in the franchises but those franchises are virtually worthless.

One of those players who was grossly overpaid? Jon Rahm, who reportedly signed for $300 million in December 2023. We definitely know it was a long-term contract since Rahm just admitted as much.

“Right now, I have several years in my contract left. I’m pretty sure they did a pretty good job when they drafted that so I don’t see many ways out. Right now, I’m not really thinking about it because we still have a season to play and majors to compete for. It’s not something I want to think about just yet.”

Yikes, man. Absolute yikes. The lawyers are going to rack up some billable hours on this one.

It was all so avoidable.

Instead, Rahm has looked like a total buffoon

I enjoy watching Rahm play golf. He’s an incredible talent. I would even say I greatly enjoyed hearing Rahm press conferences back in the 2020-2023 era in particular. He had been emerging as one of the most interesting voices in the game.

But the past three years, dating back to his decision to join LIV, have made Rahm look like an idiot.

At the end of the day, Rahm has been a shell of himself as a competitor the last two and a half years. One of the most passionate players in the game has been neutered.

More than that, his decision to join LIV helped lengthen golf’s civil war. We could have had this thing wrapped up a couple of years ago if he didn’t throw LIV a lifeline.

Let me take you back to 2022 when news of LIV’s reality was first becoming firm. This is what Rahm said at the time.

“There’s been a lot of talk and speculation on the Saudi league and it’s just not something that I believe is best for me and my future in golf and I think the best legacy I can accomplish is on the PGA Tour.

“Everybody’s free to make their own choice, it’s as simple as that. All I can say is from somebody young like myself who has his entire future ahead of him, it doesn’t seem like a smart thing. Again, the only appeal I see is monetary, right? So like I said just earlier on, I think there’s a lot more to be able to play for besides just money on the PGA Tour. There’s history, there’s legacy. At the end of the day, I’m in this to win tournaments, I’m in this to play against the best in the world.”

That’s an admirable stance.

And what did he do? He went directly against that.

My first article for MGS was talking about Rahm’s decision. Here is what I wrote at the time:

“Rahm is the latest in a long line of important people who have prioritized their own business interests ahead of the greater good, causing professional golf to eat itself from the inside.”

A lot of people in the comments didn’t like that line. But nearly three years later, I stand by it just as much as when I wrote it originally. Rahm didn’t have to be selfish, but he was. In the long run, it has hurt him and the game as a whole.

The guy who always says he is driven by competition, a passion for the game and following in the footsteps of his Spanish heroes like Seve Ballesteros? He took a long-term contract for the money and became a worse golfer in the process.

Throughout his time on LIV, Rahm has sounded like the life has been sucked out of him. Not only that, but he’s been simultaneously petty and vindictive about the entire process.

Where is the joy in his golf? Where is the anger in his golf?

I don’t see it. I just see a guy who made a serious mistake and is going through the motions.

He has all the energy of a hostage trying to negotiate with his captor.

Rahm was supposed to be the guy

Our expectations for Rahm are high.

He’s a top-five talent in the world. He has the capacity to be the No. 1 player in the world.

It’s one thing to watch Cameron Smith waste his talent. That’s a tough one. Smith was an awesome player. Seeing him miss major cuts by the handful is not fun.

But Rahm’s ceiling is twice as high as Smith’s.

Rahm left for LIV in the prime of his career, when he had two majors and was embarking on a quest to be one of the greatest golfers ever.

Seeing him toil away on LIV and then be uncompetitive at majors is seriously depressing. It may be the single most depressing part of this entire thing.

And now he looks like some prisoner.

Oh, so now Rahm can suddenly strike a deal with the DP World Tour to play in their events and join the European Ryder Cup team? It just took years of fines and bickering.

What changed? LIV is in trouble and Rahm wants a way out. Now he’s open to negotiating.

So you ignored everyone at the PGA Tour who told you not to go to LIV in the first place. You threw LIV a lifeline when they hadn’t signed a meaningful player since inception. You decided on money over legacy and competition. You turned your back on the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour. You became a worse player.

Man, you might as well stick with LIV through whatever is left of it. If they are playing for $5-million purses next year, you might as well stick with the league.

You believed in it so much that you wagered your entire reputation on it.

Well, you got even richer. You made your obscene money. Good for you.

But you don’t get to decide your reputation.

And, to me, Rahm’s reputation is completely tarnished.

Top Photo Caption: Jon Rahm continues to be a buffoon. (GETTY IMAGES/Hector Vivas)

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 10 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife, Anja, and dog, Hogan.

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      Ty Stubbs

      1 month ago

      How we feeling about this after T-2 finish at Aronimink😂

      Reply

      Mike Carlson

      4 weeks ago

      I would expect he isn’t feeling happy. He obviously can’t let his dislike of LIV and anyone associated with it, allow him to think rationally! Idiot.

      Reply

      Bubba

      1 month ago

      Jon Rahm is one of the best players in the world still whether you think he’s fell off a bit or not. I think it’s insanely petty of the PGA to not allow these guys an avenue back without stipulations. They (LIV golfers) made the PGA WAYYYYYYYY more money than they ever paid the players and you want to defend that? The commissioner makes as much as some of the top players. That seems like borderline a criminal racket to me, like a ponzi scheme. The Tour needs restructuring and I believe that’s what the LIV players were trying to exploit but the PGA turned them straight into the bad guys. I’m fed up with the PGA. I’ve met people who were great at golf that didn’t even get a chance to make it on tour because the upfront cost. Unless you’re some rich kid who’s parents help out or know a bunch of rich people who’ll foot your bill for awhile, you don’t get a chance at all. If the your really wants the best competition at all times, give rookies $3mil so they have a chance to prosper without fizzling out before they can get the butterflies out. Bottom line, PGA is really dumb for giving these guys the ax. Over half the LIV golf players are miles better than over three quarters of the PGA fields.

      Reply

      H

      1 month ago

      He’s set for life for him and his family. Man took a pay raise that any of us would take.

      Reply

      John

      1 month ago

      Wake up and smell reality! His entire family is financially secure for ever. He’s done his actual job as a man!

      Reply

      Phil

      1 month ago

      Sean Fairholm, your shot at John Rahm is so typical of an envious and narcissistic writer. John made a business decision with his family and his best interest as a priority. It’s always someone who doesn’t have that opportunity or talent that complains. Get over yourself.

      Reply

      Bear

      1 month ago

      His family was secure Before he took the blood money.

      Reply

      Bear Rapist

      1 month ago

      He should have taken money from Israel instead, I guess?

      Martyn

      1 month ago

      If he wanted to support his family he would have become a plumber. I think he also sees himself as a golfer and wanted the money that goes with that, if you are good

      Reply

      Bubba

      1 month ago

      Oh that’s right, I forgot about all the plumbers that make millions of dollars each year 😅 dum dum

      Dan

      1 month ago

      Many big name players stayed with the PGA. Why do you suppose that is? You can support your family on a hundred grand a year. You don’t need 300 million unless your greed is greater than your self respect

      Reply

      The Swami

      1 month ago

      just now lost respect? this is a day late and 300 mil short. lol

      Rahm got his 300 mil, but the idea he’s got no options in 2027 because he’s under contract with LIV for years yet is laughable. there isn’t likely going to BE a LIV after this year. or if so, dramatically restructured/different.

      in which case, unless (and I don’t honestly know) he got that entire amount up front, the new LIV board is not gonna be able to remotely afford paying Rahm and others their current contracts.

      then he’s free to negotiate however and wherever he wants to go with any penalties/etc therein. that’s really the only likely outcome of all this.
      but just now losing respect? the moment he won the Masters and cemented his 5 years to all majors invites AND lifetime Augusta invite, there was zero doubt in my mind he was leaving for a big bank. and he did. respect long gone for Rahm the big PGA Tour advocate/talker then.

      Reply

      Bob

      1 month ago

      Why do you care what decision he makes? If he wants to play somewhere she make a billion dollars, who are you to say otherwise? I assure you he didn’t make a single decision with your thoughts or ideas in consideration. You make this sound personal, like he did you dirty or something. Let it go, man. He’s an awesome player, and fun to watch. Leave it at that

      Reply

      David

      1 month ago

      ‘You threw LIV a lifeline when they hadn’t signed a meaningful player since inception’ – huh?? Brooks Koepka, who, at the time, was a 4x Major champion when he signed, wasn’t meaningful despite being a top 3 player on Tour since who knows when? Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau and Phil Mickelson were not meaningful?? What kind of yellow journalism is MyGolfSpy promoting on this site? LMFAO

      Reply

      Luckyoldsun

      1 month ago

      Sean,
      I completely agree with you. LIV was all about making it easy for the top players at the expense of evryone else.
      It was more a charity than a legitimate sports leage, with Mickelson, Rahm, DeChambeau et all being the recipients of Saudi charity money.

      One thing I didn’t anticipate but that mad me happy, was that as time went on, the LIV golfers seemed to do worse and worse in the major championships. I guess not being used to playing true, competitive, professional-level golf has a cost.

      Reply

      Jason Byrd

      1 month ago

      I’m sure this is keeping Rahm up at night.

      Reply

      Koke

      1 month ago

      Horrible article. Disappointed in Mygolfspy.

      Reply

      Martyn

      1 month ago

      Only because you don’t agree with it

      Reply

      Reprobate

      1 month ago

      Great article and nobody cares.

      Reply

      BigEddie

      1 month ago

      I’ll preface this with, I’ve only watched a few LIV minutes throughout the last few years and could care less about that tour. Now having said that, without LIV golf starting the PGA 1,000% would not have changed to the Signature events, increased the purses or given the players equity like they have the last 3 years. The players up until that point were individual contractors and were forced to look after themselves. Which if you don’t know anything about business, 99% of the time you better be looking after yourselves because if you don’t, who’s going to.
      And those saying they owed it to the pga to stay and be loyal…why? The pga was doing what they wanted for themselves and not the players.

      Reply

      Juan

      1 month ago

      You got it all wrong… Using ur words, is obvious you are a young idiot with out a bigger future than what you do now. Grow up. Remember nothing good will come back if you start “with out respect”

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      1 month ago

      Rahm is just another in a long line of whiny Spanish golfers with bad attitudes. He was never missed on the PGAT, sold his soul to a creepy murderous regime, I say good riddance and I don’t really ever want to see him on the PGAT again.

      All the weird liv butt kissers on here are nothing more than liv bots, trying to prop up something that is a huge failure. Rahm took the money but lost any sense of integrity.

      Reply

      Billy Barroo

      1 month ago

      Easy, I loathe LIV and not digging Rahm but Seve and Jose Maria are two of the greatest champions of all time and certainly not whiny by any means.

      Reply

      Woody

      1 month ago

      Complete trash billowing from his rich ass mouth. Only one other person in the US with that much attached bullsh!t. And I agree with that creepy regime comment, why? Cuz its 100% true.

      Reply

      Sean

      1 month ago

      Iæm so sick of Americans going on about “regimes” as if they are a top quality country who does everything right.
      The USA is a global laughingstock and embarrassment.

      You import oil from Saudi Arabia, trade with them, sell arms to them, import clothes form SE Asian sweatshops, employ chinese slave labour to manufacture your cars and electronics and then try and preach from your ivory tower about the morality of other countries when your morality is the lowest in the developed world and where people can’t even afford healthcare or higher education.

      Reply

      Max

      1 month ago

      America Derangement Syndrome

      Alex

      1 month ago

      Cope harder simp

      mg

      1 month ago

      Perhaps you should leave, Einstein.

      Plucky Purcell

      1 month ago

      Congrats to Rahm. Now he has 100’s of missions vs. the 10’s of millions he had before. I’m sure his life is much different now. aside from the fact he made it clear that greed is more important to him than legacy or competition.

      Reply

      Fred

      1 month ago

      Where is integrity lost!!!! The PGA didn’t invent golf. The audience comes out to watch the game not the salary that the CEO makes who does not play in the event where the bottom half of the players are sleeping in cars to attend. Open your eyes and see it from a business decision. Golf is such a snobbish sport where everyone yells integrity but truly does not have any. The athletes of the sport deserves to make money just as the business side.

      Reply

      Jetdoc

      1 month ago

      I highly doubt he gives af that you’re upset with him. He made a $297M profit in 3 years.

      He made generational wealth while you complain about him. This article and its comments are hilarious! All of you condemning him? Please tell me how YOU would’ve turned that offer down if it were made to you! If you say you would have, you’re either not telling the truth, or you’re stupid! Take your pick!

      Reply

      Nigel

      1 month ago

      I have to admit I am enjoying watching LIV fall apart at the seems, like it was always going to do with an awful business model. And for some crazy reason people still can’t see what LIV really stands for. Why? Why are people obsessed with holding onto something that was never good for the game of golf, the fans, and even the players. To read some of these comments and how they still stick up for the guys who abandoned the game for a bag of money is insane. Idk what will happen to the players but I hope they all have to start on the Korn Ferry tour and earn there way back I don’t care what their last name is. They had everything and threw it away for LIV, everyone told them it was a bad idea but they didn’t listen. They deserve all the bad things that are coming their way, Rahm, Mickelson, Bryson, Reed, DJ, Cam, Casey, Garcia, Kaymer, LaSasso, Hatton, Ancer, Poulter, Niemann, Detry, Westwood. Wish I was a fly on the wall for the contract re-negotiation with the Saudi’s ” you guys are only getting ten percent of what was promised, if you complain you will lose your head…literally ” lol.

      Reply

      Fred

      1 month ago

      LIV is great. There is no quit. You have to play for yourself and the team.

      Reply

      Patrick

      1 month ago

      Right on FredA-I agree… these new concepts and teams are proven in Ryder action & presidents cup… several ways and stats to watch -like fantasy football takes being a fan up a jotch

      Bear

      1 month ago

      Live sucks

      Milt deReyna

      1 month ago

      It has been very interesting to see the effects that LIV play has had on some of these guys. Hatton appears to be unaffected. But Rahm is a ghost, and Cam Smith might as well have given his mojo to Dr. Evil. A couple of years ago, Smith ran down Rory and took The Open from him, he was as hot as any golfer in the world. Look at him now. Dustin Johnson appears to be enjoying his money, good for him. He doesn’t seem to care much about golf, though. His business. Things will get worse. Poulter, Westwood and the little brat Sergio will stamp their feet and whine about not being welcomed back. And as for Rahm and Smith? Do any of you understand that they are both Civil Servants working for the Saudi government? Absurdly highly paid, but contractual employees nonetheless.

      Reply

      K W Lawniczak

      1 month ago

      As a great sage once said,” were’s the beef ?”.

      Reply

      Philippe

      1 month ago

      This article is shameful, Jon Rahm took the best decision for himself and his family. That is commendable and you are showing how small minded you are.

      Reply

      Ignacio de la Piedra

      1 month ago

      The article shows some envy. I agree to say that Liv competitiveness is not the same as the PGA but calling Rahm an idiot because he received a $300MM contract?? Would love to see you say it to his face personally!

      Reply

      Tony

      1 month ago

      I never comment. But I went to the comments because this article is trash and the writer needed to know it. Its good to see thats what most people think about it as well.

      Reply

      REDO

      1 month ago

      Truth hurts doesn’t it. Stings real bad.

      Reply

      d.

      1 month ago

      I’m not one however, everything is too much about money. That’s the new dark pursuit right there.

      Reply

      FEDUPCALIFORNIAN

      1 month ago

      You sir are correct.

      Reply

      Soren Hansen

      1 month ago

      Well, I must admit that I totally agree with Sean. If it were up to me, I would not permit Ram or Dechambeu return to either the PGA nor the DPWT. They chose their path, rejected an offer to return to the PGA tour. They should take the consequences of their decisions.

      Reply

      AL

      1 month ago

      I personally don’t blame Jon, he took the money (let’s do not forget his words before joining the LIV: “I already have enough money for me and my family for the rest of our lives” but anyway).
      My feeling is that he was called to be a successor of Seve, and he wasted that opportunity (and that’s a fact).
      So, hate? No. But a lot of sorry to see such a talented wasted in what it could have been a great career. Now it seems he has lost his competitiveness for a money that he didn’t really need.

      Reply

      Bob

      1 month ago

      I think Sean’s take isn’t far off. Jon Rahm may have made a mint of money, but I don’t think the LIV tour has helped the golfing part of his career or any other careers except maybe for Bryson. But really, all it has done for Bryson is to show that he’d rather be on his own platform (YouTube) than compete weekly at a high competitive level.

      And look, if the bottom line of professional sports for someone is who can make the most money in their career, more power to you. I’m not there myself. I’d rather see Rahm play with Scottie and Rory, et al. and enjoy the drama of it.

      Reply

      Tim

      1 month ago

      I don’t think Rahm cares about what you or the rest of these clowns thinks. He has FU money and can do whatever he likes to do. Just because you all worship these guys but for him this is a job an he treats it as such.

      Reply

      Marcus M

      1 month ago

      Exactly…. well said

      Reply

      Aaronious B.

      1 month ago

      Good for him. But weird for you to flex.

      Reply

      Greg

      1 month ago

      I totally agree with this. In today’s business environment, the PGA and LIV are both businesses, you have to look out for your own interests. That’s what Rahm did.
      “Rahm is the latest in a long line of important people who have prioritized their own business interests ahead of the greater good, causing professional golf to eat itself from the inside.”
      The PGA looks out for the PGA first. Many PGA players are not happy with the current management, schedule and how money is distributed. That’s why several top players have withdrawn from “signature” events in a form of protest or how the PGA is being run.
      Rahm looked out for Rahm as he should have.

      Reply

      Jwb

      1 month ago

      Rahm is the latest in a long line of important people who have prioritized their own business interests ahead of the greater good, causing professional golf to eat itself from the inside.”

      Yeah you kind of lost me with the whole socialist golf utopia bit.

      Don

      1 month ago

      Then why is he doing all the whining.He must still be concerned with his golf legacy.

      Milt deReyna

      1 month ago

      Uhhhh, well no, at least as far as PGA Tour is concerned, Rahm cannot do whatever he likes to do. And I do believe that the article explicitly states that Rahm does indeed have FU money, so you also missed the entire point of it. But you do you.

      Reply

      Jim

      1 month ago

      Well, he can’t really do whatever he wants because he’s stuck in a contract with a dying entity.

      Reply

      Tom

      1 month ago

      LIV isthe best thing to ever happen to the PGAT. The purses have more than doubled…where was all that money before LIV? If I were a tour player I would be asking that question loud and often. Rahm was one of the smart/lucky guys that are going to benefit from both sides of the equation. The “over the hill” guys got rich instead of waiting for the senior tour and the young studs will all benefit from PGAT and Liv. Rahm will come out of this smelling like a Rose!

      Reply

      Yes and now the PGAT has had to sell it’s soul to the interests of investors. Charity and the communities are the losers. One need look no further than last week to see $100 and up tickets, disinterested crowds and no mention of charity being the biggest winner on TOUR. Now the TOUR wants “bigger markets”. The Presidents Cup. A TOUR property will be in Chicago this fall. The Cubs will be in the heat of a pennant race. The Bears will be starting a new season with their best QB in decades and golf? Really? Recreational golf may be healthier than ever. The PGAT? They needed outside investment to survive. That outside help wants to get paid. We will see.

      Reply

      Mike

      1 month ago

      Was the pga tour past or close to the brink of losing money?

      itsteetime

      1 month ago

      I agree with the primary point of this article. It isn’t just that all those players took the money … we all have price; its just that no one offered it to most of us. LIV made the offer to many and some accepted. Good for them.

      Does the PGA Tour need Rahm; I don’t think so. Will Rahm need the PGA Tour for the Spanish legacy; YES!

      Reply

      Tim

      1 month ago

      Rahm doesn’t need the PGA tour anymore. He did at one time and now he is filthy rich. His grandchildren will be rich. What the heck does his Spanish legacy have to do with anything?

      Reply

      Bigman

      1 month ago

      Sean, you are correct. I have no problem with someone taking the money. That’s what it’s all about. But he took it and now has to live with the consequences. The PGA was no worse with Rahm or anyone else who took the cash not involved. LIV Golf is absolute GARBAGE (Team Golf?? what a joke). There are tons of upcoming stars. Enjoy the $300 mill…

      Reply

      Divot4224

      1 month ago

      Hey Sean, we have enough haters in our lives right now so maybe do a positive article about golf or people supporting other people. Rahm had his chance to come back and CHOSE not to do so. He left so that his family would never have to worry financially again. Enough!! You mention the LIV guys being over paid. The PGA Tour just paid a player $1 million dollars for finishing THIRD at Doral. All of the players, both LIV and PGA are just wealthy elitists demanding privileges and money while working less and less. Sort of like you.

      Reply

      Cal in

      1 month ago

      The PGAT felt they had to pay obscene purses to keep the players LIV was trying to buy. It makes the professional game worse and it all stated with Norman and LIV. It was never about a viable business it was about taking over the PGAT. Fortunately it didn’t succeed.

      Reply

      Jim Rebey

      1 month ago

      But the PGAT didn’t have to match money, they said it was about history, legacy, integrity, the competition, the cut. And then they turned around and found more money for purses, elevated events with no cuts and smaller fields, axed tournaments with history and legacy, sought investment capitalists, pretty much guaranteed more money to the top players. Sure looks like they copied the LIV model sans teams.

      Bill

      1 month ago

      Totally agree,I remember his statements about LIV as well and was very surprised when he jumped. He went from next Spanish hero to a bad bowl of Spanish rice.

      Reply

      Robert

      1 month ago

      Totally agree. I will not watch or support anything he is involved in or dies !

      Reply

      Casher D

      1 month ago

      I agree that his image will forever be tarnished. He is super defensive and douchy when he is asked about it. With that being said, I am probably taking 300 mil for 4 or 5 years of work…

      Reply

      Fake

      1 month ago

      And if that work happens to be golf…

      Reply

      Jim N

      1 month ago

      I can honestly say that I would have taken the money too. No one is promised tomorrow and it is just a game. It is sad that Rahm will go down as a nobody in golf because he had the potential to be one of the best .

      Reply

      Tim

      1 month ago

      In what world would Rahm be a nobody in golf, He has won 2 majors and 24 tournaments worldwide in his career. How many others can say that? Maybe 20 at best so far from a nobody. Do you people know anything about golf?

      Reply

      Landis

      1 month ago

      The man has no integrity.

      FEDUPCALIFORNIAN

      1 month ago

      Landis you would NEVER say that to his face you little coward. Go climb back under your rock while your mom sells herself some more. What a sanctimonious tool.

      OGCB

      1 month ago

      The article does seem a little harsh but I do see where Sean is coming from. I don’t like the look of Rahm saying one thing and then doing a 180 and taking the bag of cash once it became big enough. It would seem that Rory was offered larger and larger sums of money but stuck to his stance and didn’t cave, and I think I respect more than I harbor any ill feelings for Rahm for caving and making the cash grab. He made his choice and now is living with the consequences, albeit with a larger bank account.

      If you want to see Rahm joyfully play golf, I encourage people to watch the Bob Does Sports youtube episode with Rahm when they do the Krispy Kreme challenge. He looks like he’s having fun in that as he devours 13 donuts in like 2 holes :D

      Kudos to Sean here too for allowing some negative feedback to make it into the comments section. I made a comment on Brittany’s wedge loft article the other day about fact checking data before publishing things and it got filtered, as have other comments I’ve left in her articles that were slightly critical. Not sure who mods these article comments, but things sure seem inconsistent.

      Anyway, keep up the original content and sharing opinions Sean. I’d rather see this than recycled test information ad nauseum that seems slapped together only to draw clicks for ad revenue or act as a product endorsement.

      Reply

      Peter Milojevic

      1 month ago

      If you’re going for the money say so, don’t make up a pack of garbage about wishing to further the progression of golf. Personally don’t mind people going for the money if that’s what they want just be honest about it.

      Reply

      john

      1 month ago

      How can we fault an individual that made a personal and legal financial decision?
      $300 million is life-changing money. You mention “legacy”. He’s created a legacy of wealth for his family.
      He isn’t obligated to please or entertain you.

      Reply

      TJ

      1 month ago

      Like the author would have turned down that kind of money. 😂😂

      Reply

      Calvin

      1 month ago

      The PGAT felt they had to pay obscene purses to keep the players LIV was trying to buy. It makes the professional game worse and it all stated with Norman and LIV. It was never about a viable business it was about taking over the PGAT. Fortunately they didn’t succeed.

      Reply

      Burt

      1 month ago

      Liv forced the pga to make necessary changes that would have never come otherwise. Even today they changed their YouTube policy. Say what you want but liv changed the pga profoundly.

      Tim

      1 month ago

      This is by far the best response to the article I have seen.

      Reply

      Ty

      1 month ago

      This is such an angry and vindictive take.. is this you telling the world “I told you so”? Because pretty much everyone saw this coming bud. I’m by no means a “LIV guy”. I choose to watch the PGA every weekend. I can agree that LIVs business model (if it wanted to be profitable, and not just a hobby or funnel for Saudi oil kings) was not great. But what’s with the personal hate towards Rahm? I guarantee you anything you can come up with in your head, he’s had thoughts about. However, he is 300 million richer doing the thing he loves. Bad look from a golf enthusiast. If all you want is clicks, then this is a great article.

      Reply

      Jim

      1 month ago

      Exactly. I’m sure Jon will be crushed to see that this ‘gentleman’ felt it necessary to call him ‘an idiot,’ ‘selfish,’ ‘a shell of his former self,’ etc. You are certainly welcome to disagree with his decision, but Rahm set his family and many future generations up for life. I don’t call that selfish or being an idiot.

      Reply

      Sean

      1 month ago

      Saudis own 20% of Bank of America
      They own 20% of Uber and Uber Eats
      You are funding them and you don’t know it. Your a 10 handicap with no money and a mediocre life I lost respect for you.

      Reply

      OGCB

      1 month ago

      Lose respect for the writing style all you want, but it’s a shame that you’d judge someone based on their golf handicap, net worth, or “mediocre life”…..Just like it’d be silly for any of us to judge you based on your poor grammatical use of “your” instead of “you’re” and lack of appropriate punctuation.

      Reply

      Photog_guy

      1 month ago

      Well stated ogcb!

      OGCB

      1 month ago

      To Sean below. The article author wasn’t offering financial advice or golf swing tips so I’m not following your follow-up comments and how they relate back to your original rant. Also, if nobody cares about what people doing podcasts have to say, then why are podcasts wildly popular these days? I’m not a fan of them and don’t listen to any, but millions do, so people do care. I’ll go hit balls, you go pound sand.

      FEDUPCALIFORNIAN

      1 month ago

      OGCB sanctimonious while trying to criticize……makes sense…..what a hypocrite

      Jbob

      1 month ago

      The good players who went and “hurt” the PGA tour made a lot of money. The less talented players who went made a lot of money. Wins for the golfers, the people we want to see play. In turn, the players left on the PGA received MUCH fairer compensation from the PGA from top to bottom. Whether the LIV guys knew what they doing or not, they did the GOLFERS, the guys who generate the piles of cash with their hard earned skills, a major favor. We need to continue to follow the money and see how the PGA begins to treat its players after LIV dwindles.

      Reply

      Sean

      1 month ago

      This is totally correct. Nobody ever says this. All the equipment manufacturers had to collectively ban all LIV golfers. Callaway was making a Phil wedge ! Rahm putter! They moved product. Then their deals were cancelled or not renewed and scooped up by the JV team and they want them to repay back $? Bizarre logic.

      Reply

      Fake

      1 month ago

      Koepka is the only person who said LIV was about the money. For that, I do have a tiny shred of respect.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      1 month ago

      Harold Varner III said the same thing.

      Reply

      Will

      1 month ago

      At least he isn’t writing cheap clickbait.

      Reply

      Fake

      1 month ago

      Or recycling club testing articles.

      Reply

      Plucky Purcell

      1 month ago

      Congrats to Rahm. Now he has 100’s of missions vs. the 10’s of millions he had before. I’m sure his life is much different now. aside from the fact he made it clear that greed is more important to him than legacy or competition.

      Reply

      DW

      1 month ago

      This whole piece is better suited for a disgruntled fan’s Facebook page rather than a golf editorial.. Not all business decisions are rainbows and unicorns, but his definitely had some gold at the end of it. Don’t even try to think that, if offered guaranteed 3-4x your current salary to jump ship to a new rival company that you wouldn’t take it. Also, don’t pretend that LIV’s existence (even in its own limited capacity) hasn’t done the most for the PGA Tour since Tiger Woods stepped foot on Tour. The Tour was so boring and stuffy without Tiger in form.

      Reply

      Joejoe

      1 month ago

      @DW
      I totally agree.
      Even YouTube golf is more interesting than most PGA events

      Reply

      MGoBlue100

      1 month ago

      @DW & JoeJoe 1000% agree. PGAT is khaki pants, white polos and BORING golf.

      CK

      1 month ago

      Look, whether you are a LIV fan or a LIV hater there is one truth in all of this. The guys who jumped the PGA ship and went to LIV sold their souls. And that is evident in their attitudes across the board when asked about the state of LIV and their diminishing skills demonstrated on the golf course. You can argue, but what I wrote will still be true.

      Reply

      Rich E.

      1 month ago

      How much money is enough? Can you not live well and leave legacy money to your kids with less? 50 million per season on the Tour would not be out of the question when you factor in endorsements and appearance fees. Rahm may regain his swing but reputation . . . not so much

      Reply

      Pete S

      1 month ago

      Man, once LIV goes away, what will Sean have to write about anymore?

      Reply

      david price

      1 month ago

      Is what Sean writes aboout really any of your concern? Do you sign his paycheck? Why don’t you keep your snide comments to yourself? They have no place here, IMO.

      Reply

      Greg

      1 month ago

      I don’t think you understand the meaning of the word fraudulent and you should if making such an accusation. “LIV’s fraudulent business model …”
      Dishonest, deceptive, or intended to cheat someone to gain something valuable, typically money or property, often through lies or misrepresentation. It describes actions designed to trick, such as fake claims, forged documents, or scams.
      Their model may have proven to be poor or faulty but it was not fraudulent. It is not dishonest (everyone knew from the beginning where the money came from and what the vision was). There was no intent to cheat. No misrepresentation, no forged documents or scams. Fraudulent is quite a leap to take. Do you have evidence to back up this claim?

      Reply

      Togo

      1 month ago

      Greg– I think you’re being entirely too literal with your definition of fraudulent. Simple context really dictates that in this case that that the word fraud is being used (rather correctly) to show that LIV’s model in any context outside of Saudi PIF investment is untenable. This business model would have been laughed at in any other setting.

      Reply

      Paul

      1 month ago

      Describing this article as journalism is a massive stretch. Comes across as a typical Facebook hater. I hope you’re not getting payed for this garbage.

      Tom

      1 month ago

      Agree. That opening line of the article cast doubt on any credible journalism that would follow.

      I guess it is really an opinion piece, so there is no objectivity to be found. They love to point out when a LIV player plays poorly in a major but ignores other LIV players that do well.

      Reply

      Travis

      1 month ago

      Pretty sure you missed the entire point of the article!

      Reply

      Red

      1 month ago

      He also recently refused to deal with the dp tour and the fines/whatnot that they asked for in return for playing on that tour again. The other players all settled except him. Then the news broke that liv was in trouble. Guess what? He settled shortly after. The dp tour should have told him NO, check back in a couple years. All the other players settled with the dp prior to the news. People forget everything in 24 hours now so no are no repercussions anymore.

      Reply

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