LIV Is Throwing Even More Money At Players (And It Still Won’t Matter)
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LIV Is Throwing Even More Money At Players (And It Still Won’t Matter)

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LIV Is Throwing Even More Money At Players (And It Still Won’t Matter)

In what’s been a punch-counter punch kind of week in the professional golf world, LIV has successfully thwarted a potential knockout blow by the PGA Tour.

The Tour attempted to lure back Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Cameron Smith—two of the three being the most valuable players in golf—but each of them have verbally committed to LIV for the upcoming season.

Had they gone to the Tour, it might have spelled the end of LIV’s existence.

While the Tour did get Brooks Koepka back into the fold for the 2026 season, not much else has changed on their end. It’s been a lot of noise for not a lot of change.

In the aftermath of that exchange, LIV is continuing to make headlines.

  • LIV has signed Dustin Johnson to a multi-year extension, confirming his place as the 4Aces team captain. Johnson was never considered a threat to come back to the Tour.
  • Purses have been increased from $25 million per event to $30 million. More than $22 million is going towards the individual portion of each tournament. This is the most lucrative prize pool in golf.
  • LIV Golf executives are saying there has been inbound interest for minority ownership stakes in their teams and the goal is to create 13 $1-billion franchises.
  • There are rule changes coming including a deeper relegation zone. This is to appease the Official World Golf Ranking.
  • The Iron Heads GC team has been rebranded to Korean Golf Club. Kevin Na is out and Ben An is in and will take over captain duties.
  • Thomas Detry, last year’s WM Phoenix Open winner, has joined the 4Aces.
  • Anthony Kim re-earned a LIV spot through their Promotions event.

This is just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic

There is no good-faith argument that any of the above will make a meaningful difference.

  • Johnson is 41 years old and way past his prime. He’s basically a ceremonial golfer at the majors and he’s only qualified for two of those this year. By next season, his U.S. Open exemption will expire.
  • It’s doubtful that adding purse money will convince any Tour players to join. If they wanted to go, they already would have gone. LIV does have an opportunity with young players looking to establish themselves but there isn’t a lot of name value with those additions.
  • The “$1-billion franchises” line has been trotted out for multiple years at this point. Bubba Watson was talking about this … in October 2023. I’ll believe it when I see it.
  • The main thing about LIV’s bid for world ranking points that has never checked out is that LIV is an invitational league. Virtually none of the players earned their way there. They were arbitrarily invited. So Phil Mickelson should get world ranking points even though a lower-level Tour player without the same access is clearly the superior player? That has never made sense.
  • An replacing Na, adding Detry and retaining Kim doesn’t move the needle in the slightest.

The missing ingredient in LIV isn’t bigger purses, adding rank-and-file players or keeping has-beens.

Golf fans don’t care about money. If they did, the FedEx Cup would be a huge deal. Watching an extremely rich athlete make even more money is not what anyone cares about.

Now instead of playing offense and gaining new players, LIV is playing defense to retain players.

Their top guys are at press conferences looking like hostages. DeChambeau, their most valuable player by far, is talking about playing all of his golf on YouTube.

Nothing says excitement like “I’m contractually obligated to play.”

We are four years deep into LIV and we all know the deal

Tournaments will be played and money will be handed out. Hundreds of millions will be lost. Ratings will be abysmal. In-person crowds will vary from tremendous (Australia/South Africa) to literal ghost town (Saudi Arabia). Most golf fans won’t care unless LIV is coming to their town.

Rinse and repeat.

Naturally, the question is whether LIV could do anything to change this.

I think the answer is no. They had their shot to reimagine pro golf and they blew it. They just gave us a watered-down version of the Tour with 54-hole shotgun starts. Now they aren’t even doing the 54 holes!

The narrative of “LIV is dying” is kind of a complicated one. Based on hype, it’s been dead for a while now. Based on business, it’s only being supported by an irrational actor.

Based on technical existence, it’s pushing forward. It might be pushing forward for years until the Saudis get bored or players like DeChambeau and Rahm leave at the end of their contracts.

To be fair, the league will continue to make a dent in certain markets. Many fans will enjoy attending. LIV will post some memes on Instagram and get decent engagement. Their players will get paid. That’s nice.

But in terms of a TV product and being a functional business, none of that works if people aren’t watching.

Barring an act of God, nothing they can do will change that.

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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

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Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

 
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





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      RC

      5 months ago

      This article reminds of me a song from the O’Jays, “For the love of money”, although there are many other songs about money, Pink Floyd’s “Money” is excellent too! What a waste when you don’t EARN it, and even when it’s earned, it’s not how much they will make by signing big contracts, it’s how much they will keep. Sometimes I feel sorry for these players chasing a make believe dream. Some say “I want to grow the game of golf”, a line they probably were told to say. Too late, Tiger Woods has already done that. A different league doesn’t grow the game of golf in my opinion, and neither does throwing money at players. Golf is hard, time consuming, and low pay for many players, it’s like the animal kingdom, only the strong survive, others get scraps. Tough isn’t it? Earn it, you’ll appreciate it (money), and be recognized for your success on and off the field.

      Reply

      Greg

      5 months ago

      In any independent logical thought … making your opposition react to you is a win …. The leader of PGA is gone . It took the arguably greatest player to come on board to save the PGA from
      Itself … I don’t have any allegiance… not American nor from Middle
      East … I will
      Say this though , bias blinds vision, too many , offer opinions on he’s this or he’s that …when you’ve never met them or sat down and had a discussion or are in full receipt of facts
      Yeah Norman may be, and he may not . And there probably many you love , but when you peel the wrapper off you may walk the other way …

      Report without hubris and bias

      Reply

      Tim

      6 months ago

      Yahoo, you can have Brooks back. He is over the hill and has a bad attitude. The only time he played well is the majors and that appears to be over. Enjoy your boring tour.

      Reply

      Krauter

      6 months ago

      Bob Does signs with Tokomo, NOT LIV. John Harbaugh, signed with the New York Football Giants, NOT LIV. Koepka blah, blah, blah. LDS. LIV Derangement Syndrome.

      Reply

      mg

      6 months ago

      The PGA has given golfers slow play and that is all.
      I wonder what would have happened if the Saudi’s went to all the working PGA professionals and offered them a fair sum of money to display an LIV decal? In stead of paying in to the PGA for a PGA decal to be displayed on a window?

      Reply

      WillB

      6 months ago

      Why would PGA players wear the logo of a league they aren’t playing on? LIV has thrown money at PGA players to jump ship and they’ve been turned down repeatedly. Akshay, Si Woo Kim, Sungjae, Wyndham, Zalatoris, Min Woo, Hideki, Hovland, Hoge, Fowler, Morikawa, Spieth. All offered LIV contracts and all turned them down. It’s over. Let’s fast forward to next year when Bryson leaves and Rahm bails.

      Reply

      mg

      5 months ago

      I was speaking of teaching pros. They work.

      MMTwain

      6 months ago

      LIV has money. That’s all they’ve got. Money doesn’t buy credibility or legacy, that has to be earned. The question is will the Saudis have the patience for that?
      As we know, the first name associated with LIV was Greg Norman. What he did was similar to the “Curb Your Enthusiasm” storyline where Larry opened a coffee shop to spite the one next door. Norman gladly fronted a spite league against the PGA. He found a prominent bellyacher in Michelson and that made people the league had some legitimacy.
      There’s no high-mindedness here with “growing the game.” It was all about whiny spite by Norman and a chance for the Saudis to change the narrative about the brutality of their rulers.

      Reply

      Owen

      6 months ago

      “The rumors of my demise are greatly exaggerated.” – Mark Twain

      The people of MGS (and portions of the US golf viewing consumer) just don’t get what LIV is doing. LIV has made a pivot (a strong one, I would say), to focusing on INTERNATIONAL golf. The PGA tour doesn’t give a sh*t about Pro golf outside the USA. Is it any wonder why LIV has signed young, STRONG, international talent?? McKibbon, Ballestair, Puig, Neiman, Elvis Smylie..these are all young, up and coming stars in golf. From Spain, Ireland, Chile, Australia, all over. Thats where LIV can succeed and DOMINATE the PGA Tour. The presidents cup is a joke (which the PGA controls) and will continue to devolve. Names like Dustin, Cam Smith, Bryson, Rahm…those are just to hold them over until these young guys start winning Majors.

      Dont underestimate your competition PGA Tour, they got endless resources and a strong path forward.

      Reply

      WillB

      6 months ago

      LIV can sign all the “international talent” they want, but no one wants to watch golf’s minor leagues. Even if it’s more global. Viewers and consumers want to see the best players play and that’s on the PGA Tour. LIV has had 4 years and spent billions of dollars and people still think they will be successful? Get real. This is over. LIV needs to worry about the DP world tour and Korn Ferry Tour instead of the PGA Tour.

      Reply

      Duffer1

      6 months ago

      I agree that with LIV that I “don’t get it”. However that is LIV’s problem, not mine. Did “the market” need another golf league after PGA, DP Tour, LPGA, Korn Ferry, Asian, various Cups, etc. Remember XFL, WFL, World Tennis, WHA, and more? All popular sports that were saturated. As for int’l talent, LIV recruits where they can get bodies. The best still gravitate to the PGA.

      Reply

      ericsokp

      6 months ago

      I agree with everything Sean said, but he also left out the team concept which seems especially irrelevant to me. Some fans do like certain team events like The Ryder/Presidents Cup, Olympics, etc., but for the most part golf is still an individual sport. People want to see Jack vs. Arnie, Tiger vs. Phil, Scottie vs. Rory, etc. No one cares about the 4 Aces vs. the Range Goats! This isn’t Dodger/Yankees, Lakers/Celtics, Eagles/Chiefs, etc.

      Reply

      Hopp Man

      6 months ago

      Maybe liv should concentrate on Asia, Australia, and South Africa, the place where at least some fans show up.

      The reality is, golf fans don’t care about this trumped up invitation only, exhibition golf league. I don’t and none of my friends do either, everyone I know that watches golf despises liv and Greg Norman.

      Reply

      ArchieBunker

      6 months ago

      Rahm and DeChambeau will likely leave for the PGA Tour once their contracts are over. They’ve made plenty and now know their “penalty” will be no more than the $5 million parking ticket and forfeiture of the potential monetary benefits, none of which are guaranteed. LIV golf is nothing more than a Woodstock gathering for party fans, where overpaid pros play in shorts to music and firework displays.

      Reply

      Luke Mangan

      6 months ago

      GIVE IT TO EM SEAN

      Reply

      Bag advice Man 2024

      6 months ago

      Good article. Fans really don’t care about the money. Indeed, it’s a turnoff. In these liv events, it’s a lock most are just mailing it in.
      Additionally, the events themselves have no meaning or history.

      Reply

      Fake

      6 months ago

      I have to wonder at what point, even if it’s a drop in the bucket to investors, do they just say enough? Why lose millions for years on end? Even for the most eccentric wealthy people, it defies logic. You didn’t get rich just wasting money.

      Reply

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