PGA Tour vs LIV Golf: How Saudi Money Disrupted Professional Golf in 2022
Professional golf has been reshaped in just a few years by the clash between the long‑established PGA Tour and the upstart LIV Golf League, turning a once-unified sport into a case study in money, tradition, and disruption. The PGA Tour, founded in 1929 and governed by rules aligned with the U.S. Golf Association, grew into golf’s dominant stage by rewarding performance over time: four-round events, cuts after two rounds, and prize money that depended on how well a player finished. For decades, if you wanted to test yourself against the best, you went to the PGA Tour.
That default was shattered in 2022 when LIV Golf launched its first event at the Centurion Club in England, backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. According to reporting from MyrtleBeachGolf.com, LIV’s pitch was simple but powerful: guaranteed contracts, no cuts, and huge appearance fees, with stars like Phil Mickelson reportedly receiving around 200 million dollars to join. Where the PGA model said “earn it every week,” LIV said “we’ll pay you up front.”
LIV also reimagined the product itself. As Devereux Golf explains, its tournaments were built around 54-hole, three-round events with shotgun starts, meaning every group begins on a different hole at the same time to create a tighter, faster broadcast window. LIV layered a team format on top of individual play, with named franchises, logos, and captains, hoping to tap into the kind of tribal fandom seen in other sports. The PGA Tour, by contrast, kept traditional four-round, 72-hole stroke play with staggered tee times and individual competition at the center.
Beyond structure, the dispute quickly became about values. Critics highlighted “sportswashing” concerns around Saudi funding, while supporters argued that competition forced the PGA Tour to raise purses and expand access, changes even PGA-focused analysts now acknowledge. Meanwhile, outlets like MyGolfSpy report that television audiences in the United States remain far stronger for the PGA Tour, while LIV struggles to break through, especially on American networks.
Talk of formal mergers and alliances continues, but the long-term shape of elite golf is still unsettled. What is clear is that listeners are living through a rare moment when the fundamentals of a global sport are being renegotiated in real time.
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