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LIV Golf joins anti-trust lawsuit against PGA Tour

The Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series has joined an anti-trust lawsuit against the US PGA Tour brought by players who defected to the rebel circuit and received indefinite PGA suspensions.

An amended complaint filed Friday in US District Court at San Jose contends the PGA has used a monopoly position to restrict competition and unfairly banned those who left for LIV Golf.

The suit was originally filed by 11 LIV Golf players but four players were not in the updated filing — Mexico’s Abraham Ancer and Carlos Ortiz and Americans Pat Perez and Jason Kokrak.

Seven still on the lawsuit include Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau, Ian Poulter, Matt Jones, Talor Gooch, Peter Uihlein and Hudson Swafford.

LIV Golf seeks punitive damages from the PGA for what it calls “egregious interference” with contracts and potential business relationships.

Swafford, Gooch and Jones were denied a chance to participate in the PGA’s FedEx Cup playoffs when a judge rejected a legal appeal.

A hearing on the matter is set for next July while a trial date for the lawsuit is set for January 2024.

LIV Golf has attracted several big name players, including Dustin Johnson and Patrick Reed, with record purses of $25 million and guaranteed contracts for some talent.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan announced on Wednesday several changes for the 2023 season that will see top players appear in 12 “elevated” events with average prize money of $20 million and guaranteed income of $500,000 for all fully exempt PGA players in moves to combat the LIV Golf threat.

LIV Golf will reportedly announce more PGA players have joined the series following this weekend’s PGA season-ending Tour Championship.

The next LIV Golf events, which feature only 54 holes instead of 72 and shotgun starts on every hole on a course, are next week in Boston and two weeks later in Chicago.

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