LIV Versus PGA Tour At The Masters: Who Showed Up And Who Went Home Early?
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LIV Versus PGA Tour At The Masters: Who Showed Up And Who Went Home Early?

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LIV Versus PGA Tour At The Masters: Who Showed Up And Who Went Home Early?

There were 13 LIV golfers in the field at the Masters but the ultimate storyline wasn’t LIV versus the PGA Tour.

It was Rory’s moment.

A longtime defender of the PGA Tour, McIlroy couldn’t have written a better script if he tried—completing the career Grand Slam with some of LIV’s biggest names like Bryson DeChambeau and Patrick Reed chasing him down the stretch.

With so many former Tour stars now on LIV, it’s worth taking a closer look at the Masters LIV versus PGA Tour performance.

GroupPlayers in FieldMade Cut% Made CutTotal Winnings% of Paid-Out PurseBest Finish
LIV Golf13753.8%$3,477,86316.8%Patrick Reed – 3rd (‑9)
PGA Tour / Other764660.5%$17,171,02183.2%Rory McIlroy – 1st (‑11)
  • There were six amateurs in the field who are not reflected in these numbers.

What stands out

Here are some of the most interesting takeaways when you compare the LIV field with the PGA Tour field at the Masters.

Rory’s check was more than the entire LIV purse

The LIV guys may be accustomed to taking home big paychecks but Rory’s first-place $4.2-million check was more than the combined winnings of all seven LIV golfers who made the cut.

Rory McIlroy Masters

Players who missed the cut

The percentage of LIV players who made the cut compared to PGA Tour players was not much different. However, the story was more about the names that didn’t cut it. They included Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Cameron Smith, Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia and Laurie Canter.

Best LIV finishes

Early on Sunday at the Masters, it looked like DeChambeau had a chance to take the title but he finished in a tie for fifth. Reed finished in third place.

The next best LIV performance was a tie for 14th place between Jon Rahm, Tyrrell Hatton and Bubba Watson.

The top 10

There were 14 golfers (because of ties) who placed inside the top 10 at the Masters. Twelve of those golfers were from the Tour and two were from LIV.

Final thoughts

We don’t get to see PGA Tour and LIV golfers compete against each other very often which makes events like the Masters all the more compelling.

When the full field comes together, it’s a chance to see how the two tours stack up. At the 2025 Masters, it was the Tour players who walked away with the bigger share of the purse, more representation in the top 10 and, most importantly, the green jacket.

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Alex

      1 year ago

      Last Ryder Cup (when Koepka didn’t automatically qualify but was given a Ryder Cup wildcard pick), I wanted to dump Koepka and his mediocre Ryder Cup record and have Captain America, Patrick Reed, as the lone LIV member on the Ryder Cup team. Lo and behold, top LIV player at the Masters, Patrick Reed.

      Reply

      Jeremy

      1 year ago

      You might not want to look at Reed’s most recent team event record. He has played pretty poorly.

      Reply

      Joe Coleman

      1 year ago

      I don’t think it matters that much any longer. LIV stinks. I will always hate any golfer who took Saudi blood money to play on a circus tour and unnecessarily divide professional golf. LIV serves no purpose other than to sportswash the Saudi image and give a venue for Norman to get back at the PGA Tour for perceived slights. Whatever the alleged sins of the PGA Tour are, they did not deserve this fracturing of the sport.

      That said, a wide array of golfers did take that blood money. Some are kind of meh, some are pretty good golfers. So no surprise that there will be an array of finishes among LIV golfers when they do face off against the PGA Tour players in events like the Masters. Sometimes they will win those tournaments. We need to get past comparing the two tours and the results of tournaments like the Masters as any kind of gauge to compare the two tours.

      Reply

      Clay Nicolsen

      1 year ago

      Sorry, no. You’re trying to make a point using cherry-picked stats that, upon a more balanced review, show a virtual wash.

      And, I do not hate LIV players, at all. Trust me, they had a chance to secure their families’ financial futures for the rest of their lives, and they took it. Good for them.

      It’s the Saudi regime and PIF that deserves the scorn. Oh, and the team concept is stupid.

      Reply

      Jeff Taverna

      1 year ago

      The stats don’t exactly represent your narrative. LIV have 15% of the field (13 of 89) yet won 16.8% of the money. I do not believe they under performed the PGA Tour players as the narrative applies. They actually, but only slightly, out performed the PGA Tour players (15% of the field and 17% of the money). Where the PGA Tour had 85% of the players and only 83% of the money. Also LIV had 15% of the field and 20% of the top 10. Conversely the PGA Tour had 85% of the field, but only 80% of the top 10. This is near proportionate performances for each Tour.

      Reply

      Ryan

      1 year ago

      I am not sure your reasoning around “share of the purse” is compelling. If you take the share and average it against the players who made the cut, it comes out to ~$500k vs ~$375k average, favoring LIV. I am also not sure if “average finish” for LIV vs PGA players would be that interesting. Even the % of the field vs majors won over the last year or 2 doesn’t seem like a fair figure.

      Golf is a sport where winning is often dictated by who got “hot” that week. This is reinforced in that players rarely finish in line with their world ranking.

      What I took from the masters was that LIV players can complete w/ PGA tour players.

      Reply

      Nick Dunphy

      1 year ago

      LIV average per player was $496,000 PGA tour average win per player was $373,283–who cares virtually the same cut percentage when you consider the PGA tour had so many more opportunities.

      Never understand the hate for LIV, just guys making a personal decision that best suited them. Who are we to tell someone where to play golf and who to play golf with? And what the tour did to Bryan Wesley was cruel? Another guy just trying to earn a living playing golf.

      Reply

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