Rory McIlroy remains hopeful that the fractured state of golf between established tours and Saudi-funded LIV Golf can heal — but said that probably wouldn’t happen until two lawsuits are decided and Greg Norman is no longer involved in LIV Golf.
Key points:
- LIV Golf is the lead plaintiff in an antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour, with a trial date scheduled for January 2024
- Greg Norman is the CEO of LIV Golf and has been key to signing players away from the PGA Tour
- Norman said having another golf competition has helped golfers on the PGA Tour score larger pay packets
“I think Greg needs to go. I think he just needs to exit stage left,” McIlroy said at the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai.
“He’s made his mark, but I think now is the right time to sort of say, ‘Look, you’ve got this thing off the ground, but no-one is going to talk unless there’s an adult in the room that can actually try to mend fences.’
“But right now, it’s a stalemate because there can’t be any other way.”
Reports last week suggested Norman would be moving away from his role as commissioner and CEO and that LIV Golf was pursuing Mark King, who formerly ran TaylorMade and is now CEO of Taco Bell.
Majed Al Sorour, CEO of the Saudi Golf Federation, denied the report.
LIV Golf is now the lead plaintiff in an antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour, with a trial date scheduled for January 2024 if it goes that far. Courts in the United Kingdom are expected to rule in February whether the European tour can punish players for joining LIV Golf.
It was the latest barb McIlroy has tossed at Norman, dating to McIlroy gleefully pointing out in his TV interview in June after he won the Canadian Open that he had more career PGA Tour wins than Norman.
What might have prompted the latest remark was Norman’s interview in Australia on Monday, during which it was announced that LIV Golf would be playing in Adelaide next April.
Norman was talking about the value competition brings to business and sport when he mentioned how PGA Tour players are benefiting from LIV Golf, primarily through a $US100 million ($148 million) Player Impact Program that has doubled in size in response to the LIV threat.
The PGA Tour also has 12 elevated events starting next year that average $US20 million ($29.6 million) in prize money.
“Every PGA Tour player should be thanking LIV, including Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, because the PIP program wouldn’t have been increased without LIV,” Norman said.
“Prize money wouldn’t have been increased without LIV, all these other things that have been introduced by the PGA Tour because of LIV. Competition is the best thing in life, in business and in sport. LIV is not going to go anywhere. “
But McIlroy would beg to differ.
“I’ve said this a million times: Tiger is the reason that we are playing for as much as we are playing for,” McIlroy said.
“Tiger is the reason that the stature of our game is where it is. The generation of Tiger and the generation coming after Tiger have all benefited from him and his achievements and what he’s done for the game of golf.
“I don’t think Tiger should be thankful to anyone for anything. I think everyone else in the game should be thankful.”
AP
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