Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
More
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Rory McIlroy: 'it's what everyone wants' as PGA stars set to meet more often

AFP
Rory McIlroy watches his drive from the 15th tee on day 2 of the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth last week.
Rory McIlroy watches his drive from the 15th tee on day 2 of the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth last week.AFP
In response to the challenge of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series, top golfers will play more often for richer purses in the 2022-23 US PGA Tour campaign that begins Thursday.

The PGA's final wrap-around season before returning to a calendar-year format in 2024 opens with American Max Homa defending his crown at the Fortinet Championship at Napa, California.

The upstart LIV Series has caused turmoil in the golf world since its June debut, with record purses and financial guarantees luring several top PGA players.

The PGA responded last month by announcing top players would play against each other more often and in more events each season starting in 2022-23.

"We've all made a commitment to get together more often to make the product more compelling," said Rory McIlroy, who last month captured his third FedEx Cup playoff title.

"LIV are going to do what they're going to do. The PGA Tour are just trying to control what they can control and put forward the best product possible.

"Having the top players in the world competing against each other more often is what everyone wants. And I think once we solve for that, a lot of the rest of the stuff sort of takes care of itself."

An expanded bonus program for players based on exposure and minimum payouts of $500,000 for every fully-exempt player were other changes aimed at slowing the tide of defections to LIV Golf.

"Every single member of the PGA Tour is going to benefit from the changes we're going to be making," PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said.

Dustin Johnson, Cameron Smith, Patrick Reed, Bryson DeChambeau, Bubba Watson, Joaquin Niemann, Sergio Garcia and Phil Mickelson were among the players who joined LIV Golf. The PGA Tour gave them indefinite bans.

An anti-trust lawsuit involving LIV Golf and some of its players has a January 2024 court date.

For the season in between, the top stars of the competing tours will meet in next year's four major tournaments - the Masters, the PGA Championship, the US Open and the British Open - as well as The Players Championship.

Top-ranked Masters champion Scottie Scheffler, PGA Championship winner Justin Thomas, Tokyo Olympic winner Xander Schauffele, John Rahm world number two McIlroy and fourth-ranked Patrick Cantlay are among the PGA stars set for the coming campaign.

A dozen other "elevated events", with purses of at least $20 million, will include Tournament of Champions, Genesis Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational, Memorial tournament, WGC Match Play and the three season-ending FedEx Cup playoff events: the St. Jude Championship, BMW Championship and Tour Championship.

Only 70 players will reach next August's playoffs, down from 125, with those 70 fully exempt for the 2024 season. Just 50 will reach the BMW and only 30 will qualify for the Tour Championship in Atlanta.

This will be the last in a decade-long run for events in September through November to be season openers. Many top players have used the time as a post-season break.

France gouvernement

Les jeux d’argent et de hasard peuvent être dangereux : pertes d’argent, conflits familiaux, addiction…

Retrouvez nos conseils sur www.joueurs-info-service.fr (09-74-75-13-13, appel non surtaxé)