The Wingo Network

Bryson DeChambeau Is Killing LIV Golf One Quote at a Time

21 min · 21. maj 2026
episode Bryson DeChambeau Is Killing LIV Golf One Quote at a Time cover

Description

Bryson DeChambeau Said He Might Just Do YouTube. That Is a Disaster for LIV Golf. LIV Golf is looking for 250 million dollars in outside investment to survive past this season. PIF has pulled its funding. The tour is preparing to file for bankruptcy. Scott O'Neill — LIV's CEO — is scrambling to find sponsors, media rights deals, and investors who believe there is still a business here worth saving. And then Bryson DeChambeau went on a podcast and said this: "I'm in that weird space right now. I don't know what to do either. Content creation or professional golf. I don't know what to do right now." Scott O'Neill, somewhere, felt that. Bryson is not just a player on LIV Golf. O'Neill has called him a business partner. Said he is in the room for negotiations. Said he has ideas and is invested in the future of the tour. Bryson is the one LIV player who transcends the tour — three million YouTube subscribers, a crossover audience that follows him for the content as much as the golf, a personality that generates attention whether he is playing well or not. If LIV has a calling card heading into investor meetings, it is Bryson DeChambeau. And Bryson just told the world he might be done with professional golf. Trey breaks down exactly why this matters — and why the timing could not be worse. Without unlimited guaranteed money, what is LIV actually selling to players who could be on the PGA Tour? Without Bryson and Jon Rahm, what is the product? And without a compelling product, how do you convince 250 million dollars worth of investors that this thing has a future? It was always about the money. That is the honest version of why players went to LIV in the first place. Graham McDowell said it. Dustin Johnson essentially said it. Everyone knows it. The guaranteed money was the entire value proposition. Now the guaranteed money is gone. And the one player who might have been able to stay relevant without it — because his YouTube channel gives him an independent income stream — is the same player who just raised his hand and said maybe I'll just do that instead. Trey also addresses the competitive fire question directly. Brooks Koepka came back from LIV and said he has fallen in love with the game again. Tiger Woods is grinding through a body that has been through more surgeries than most people can count because he wants win number 83. That is what greatness looks like. Bryson has won two US Opens. He has been on the biggest stages in golf and delivered. The question is whether that competitive drive is still there — or whether the content creator version of Bryson has become more interesting to him than the golfer version. And then there is the moon landing. Separate issue entirely. But Trey gets into that too. This is a story about one quote at exactly the wrong moment — and what it reveals about where LIV Golf actually is right now. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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episode Patrick Mahomes Just Became the First Half Billion Dollar Player in NFL History artwork

Patrick Mahomes Just Became the First Half Billion Dollar Player in NFL History

Patrick Mahomes Just Became the First Half Billion Dollar Player in NFL History Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order On June 9th the Kansas City Chiefs reset the NFL landscape. Again. Patrick Mahomes signed a new contract extension that adds two years to his deal — keeping him in Kansas City through 2033 — and brings the total value of his contract to $504.75 million. With incentives, he can earn up to $522 million. The new money in this deal is $239 million, and the average annual value comes out to $64 million per year, a new record for the highest annual salary in NFL history. He is now, officially, the first half billion dollar player the NFL has ever had. This is the third time the Chiefs and Mahomes have reset the quarterback market — and all three times have come under GM Brett Veach. Since 2022, Kansas City has now committed $689 million in new money to Patrick Mahomes. Why It Is Still a Bargain Half a billion dollars sounds absurd until you put it next to the other number the Chiefs just signed off on — a $3.3 billion stadium deal, including a new $300 million practice facility, on what has been described as a team-friendly arrangement with the state of Kansas. That stadium deal does not happen without Patrick Mahomes. Five Super Bowl appearances. Three championships. Three-time Super Bowl MVP. Two-time regular season MVP. The Chiefs went from one Super Bowl win in 1970 to a fifty-year drought before Mahomes arrived and changed everything. Compare half a billion dollars to $3.3 billion and the math works out fine for Kansas City. What This Means for the Roster Contract extensions like this are not just about paying the quarterback — they are roster construction tools. By extending Mahomes further into the future, the Chiefs create salary cap flexibility right now. This is the same approach that allowed them to completely rebuild their offensive line after the Super Bowl LV loss to Tampa Bay — trading for Joe Thuney, drafting Creed Humphrey and Trey Smith, and turning a weakness into a strength. Expect a similar response now. The Chiefs have been connected to a potential trade for Jawaan Taylor given their depth at tackle, and the front office’s entire approach is built around keeping Mahomes healthy and surrounding him with talent. All indications are that he will be ready for Week One — Monday Night Football against the Denver Broncos. The Second Wave Trey draws the comparison directly to the New England Patriots dynasty — which was really two separate runs held together by Brady, Belichick, and Robert Kraft. The first wave of this Chiefs dynasty was Mahomes, Travis Kelce, and Tyreek Hill. The second wave is being built right now — Mahomes, Rashee Rice, Xavier Worthy, and a young core of defensive talent including this year’s draft picks out of Clemson and the cornerback room. This past season was the first time since Mahomes became the starter in 2018 that the Chiefs did not reach the AFC Championship Game — derailed by the knee injury he suffered in December at Arrowhead. Every other year, at minimum the AFC title game. The Chiefs are betting half a billion dollars that this was a blip, not the end of an era. The Competition: The AFC is loaded. Bo Nix and the Broncos won the AFC West last season. Justin Herbert and the Chargers are knocking on the door. Josh Allen and the Bills are still chasing their first breakthrough past Mahomes. Joe Burrow and the Bengals remain dangerous. And now Drake May and the Patriots — fresh off acquiring AJ Brown — are entering the conversation as well. The Chiefs know exactly what they are up against. And their answer is to make sure the foundation of everything — Patrick Mahomes — is locked in, motivated, and set up for as long as possible to keep this dynasty’s second chapter alive. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Yesterday10 min
episode The NCAA Cannot Stop a Player Who Bet on His Own Team From Playing. That Tells You Everything artwork

The NCAA Cannot Stop a Player Who Bet on His Own Team From Playing. That Tells You Everything

The NCAA Cannot Stop a Player Who Bet on His Own Team From Playing. That Tells You Everything. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. Brendan Sorsby is a quarterback at Texas Tech. He was caught betting on his own team and other teams. The NCAA banned him. That should be the end of the story. Betting on your own team is not a gray area. It is the one rule that every sport — college, professional, every level — treats as completely non-negotiable. The NFL has been crystal clear about this. Players have been banned for life in other sports for exactly this. The NCAA did the right thing. They enforced the rule. And then a judge in Lubbock, Texas — the city where Texas Tech is located — granted an injunction and said Sorsby can play anyway. He will serve a two game suspension against Abilene Christian and Oregon State, both non-conference games, and then he is back under center in week three. The NCAA banned him. A judge overruled them. And the NCAA could do nothing about it. Trey and David Rumsey of Front Office Sports break down what this actually means — and why this is not really about Brendan Sorsby at all. This Is the NCAA's Fault Five years ago NIL arrived and the NCAA wanted no part of governing it. They stepped back and let schools, conferences, and players figure it out on their own. Coaches — including Nick Saban, someone many people believe could have been an effective commissioner for college football — have been saying for years that it is the wild wild west out there and nobody is in charge of anything. Now that lack of governance has metastasized into something even more serious. The NCAA cannot enforce a gambling ban — the most fundamental integrity rule in all of sports — because a single judge in the same city as the school in question can simply override it. There is no clear chain of authority. There is no consistent process. There is just whatever court happens to hear the appeal and whatever that judge decides. The Reaction Has Been Universal David Rumsey was at the Big 12 spring meetings just weeks before this ruling came down. At the time, almost nobody was talking about the Sorsby case. Joey McGuire, Texas Tech's head coach, addressed it briefly and expressed support for his player — but the broader sentiment across the conference was that Sorsby was simply out of luck. He would serve his ban, head to the NFL supplemental draft, and that would be that. Nobody felt like his future was being ruined. He has the talent to play professionally regardless. Then the ruling came down and the reaction across the Big 12, the SEC, and the Big Ten was immediate and universal. Athletic directors, coaches, presidents — all expressing the same stunned reaction. And now there is real discussion about other Big 12 schools refusing to play Texas Tech in any sport if this ruling stands. Could Schools Actually Boycott Texas Tech David Rumsey thinks the odds are high — at least within the Big 12. Texas Tech's non-conference schedule this year is Abilene Christian and Oregon State, so SEC and Big Ten schools have limited direct leverage in the short term. But within the Big 12, where Texas Tech needs conference opponents to function, a boycott would be a real and serious problem. The NCAA has already filed an appeal of the injunction. Nobody seems to know how many times an appeal can be appealed. But given the universal reaction across college athletics, it seems unlikely this ruling stands as is. The Self-Reporting Problem Here is the part that should make every athletic director in the country furious. For decades, programs that self-reported violations to the NCAA did so because they believed in a system of accountability — even when self-reporting hurt them competitively. Schools voluntarily took hits to their programs because they trusted the process. If a school can simply find a sympathetic judge and get an NCAA ruling overturned through the court system, every school that ever self-reported anything looks, in retrospect, like they made a unilateral decision to disadvantage themselves for nothing. The NCAA's authority depended on schools believing the rules applied equally to everyone. That belief is now in serious question. The Bigger Picture This is not really a story about one quarterback at Texas Tech. It is a story about an organization that abdicated its responsibility to govern college athletics during the NIL transition, and is now discovering that the consequences of that abdication extend far beyond name image and likeness deals. If the NCAA cannot enforce a gambling ban — arguably the single most important integrity rule in all of sports — what exactly can it enforce? College administrators have been asking Congress for help for five years. David Rumsey does not believe federal legislation is coming, regardless of where the current bill stands. Which means college athletics may simply continue operating with no real governing authority — case by case, court by court, with outcomes determined less by rules and more by which judge happens to be assigned and where they went to school. The NCAA does plenty of fine work in lacrosse, swimming, and other Olympic sports. But in the two sports that actually generate the money — football and basketball — there is, in Trey's words, nobody running the ship. The Brendan Sorsby case is just the latest and most alarming proof of that. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Yesterday8 min
episode Will LIV Golf Actually Make It to the End of the Season? artwork

Will LIV Golf Actually Make It to the End of the Season?

PIF Said They Would Fund LIV Golf Through the Season. That May No Longer Be True. Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. We told you this was coming. Back in April, right before the Mexico City event, the Wingo Network reported that the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia was pulling its funding from LIV Golf. State-run media denied it. Then their feed went dark for three hours. Then everything we said came true. PIF issued a statement saying they would fund LIV Golf through the remainder of the season. That was the reassurance. That was the floor. The commitment that gave LIV Golf its runway to find new investors, finish the season, and figure out what comes next. Now Front Office Sports is reporting that even that floor may be gone. David Rumsey — one of the best reporters covering the business of golf — joins Trey to break down everything Front Office Sports is hearing. The PIF funding may not last through the end of the season. The final four events are not guaranteed. And the 47-day gap in LIV's schedule — originally explained away as avoiding the summer heat and the crowded calendar — is starting to look like something much more serious. The 47-Day Silence LIV Golf canceled its late June New Orleans event back in April. At the time the explanation was scheduling and weather. Nobody believed it then and the silence since has made it harder to believe now. There are 47 days between LIV's last event in Spain and their next scheduled event. During that window — agents, players, team partners, and sponsors are all asking the same question. Is the money actually going to be there? Scott O'Neill, LIV Golf's president, went on CNBC and was asked directly — can you guarantee the final four events will be played? His answer was not yes. It was something closer to — I can guarantee a great investment opportunity if you come join us. That is not a guarantee. That is a pivot. And everyone watching understood exactly what it meant. The Funding Structure Here is the detail that changes everything. One LIV source told Front Office Sports that PIF's funding payments are on a monthly basis — not one large chunk paid upfront. If that is accurate it means the money is not sitting in an account waiting to be spent. It is coming in month by month. And if PIF decides to stop sending it — the lights go out. Three events in August alone carry thirty million dollar purses at the first two and a forty million dollar team championship at the end. That is one hundred million dollars in prize money for three events. Before operational costs. Before travel. Before anything else. The math does not work without PIF and it may not work with them if the payments stop early. What Is LIV Actually Selling? Scott O'Neill has said LIV Golf needs approximately three hundred million dollars in outside investment to survive. David Rumsey breaks down exactly what they are pitching — a LIV 2.0 model built around a ten event season, a team-based structure, reduced prize money, and player equity stakes. The idea is that players become owners. That the team concept creates long-term value that replaces the guaranteed money that lured everyone there in the first place. The problem is that the pitch to investors and the pitch to players are in direct conflict. You cannot tell investors this is a lean efficient operation while also telling players they will be paid enough to leave the PGA Tour or the DP World Tour behind. Cam Smith said it publicly — the prize money is going down. If it goes down far enough the question becomes why would any player choose LIV 2.0 over the alternatives that are available to them. Jon Rahm has already made his position clear. He will be a player if they can pay him. He will not be a business partner. Bryson DeChambeau has been held up as the face of LIV's future — the crossover creator who transcends the tour. But Bryson has now missed the cut at two straight majors and publicly said he does not know whether he wants to compete professionally anymore. That is not the pitch you want your flagship player making while you are trying to raise three hundred million dollars. The Australian Open — LIV's Best Market Under Threat One more development that did not get enough attention. The PGA Tour and DP World Tour just announced a significant investment in the Australian Open — effectively moving to reclaim the market where LIV had its greatest success. The Adelaide event where Anthony Kim came back from five shots down to beat Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau was arguably the greatest story in LIV's history. Now the establishment tours are moving in with money and player commitments of their own. LIV has said they have a contract for the Adelaide event running well into the 2030s. But contracts require funding to honor. And if the PIF money stops early everything becomes uncertain. The Rocket Mortgage Classic And one more data point from the broader golf business landscape. The Rocket Mortgage Classic — a PGA Tour event in Detroit — is not returning in 2028 under the new model. The sponsor looked at the price tag for a first track event and decided it was not worth it. It is the first sign of what could become a significant sponsor pressure problem for the PGA Tour as the new system takes shape. Brian Rolap is expected to address this at a press conference at the Travelers Championship — the Wingo Network will be there for that coverage. The 47 days of silence. The funding that may stop early. The investors who have not shown up. The players who are asking questions nobody can answer. David Rumsey of Front Office Sports on what he is hearing — and what happens next. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Yesterday15 min
episode Golf's Longest Day, the US Women's Open and Everything You Need to Know Before Shinnecock | GOLF LIVE artwork

Golf's Longest Day, the US Women's Open and Everything You Need to Know Before Shinnecock | GOLF LIVE

Golf's Longest Day, the US Women's Open and Everything You Need to Know Before Shinnecock | GOLF LIVE Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. The two biggest weeks in golf are here. The US Women's Open at Riviera is underway. The US Open at Shinnecock Hills is two weeks away. The major season is at its peak and Golf Live has everything you need to know heading into the most compelling stretch of the golf calendar. Trey Wingo and Justin Ray break it all down. Golf's Longest Day The summer solstice and the US Open week arriving simultaneously is not a coincidence — it is one of golf's great annual traditions. The longest day of the year and the hardest test in golf colliding at exactly the same moment. Shinnecock Hills in Southampton New York is one of the most historic and demanding venues in the history of the game. The USGA wants to identify the best player in the world by making everyone else uncomfortable. Long rough. Firm greens. Narrow fairways. Unforgiving conditions. The US Open is the one major where par feels like a victory. Nelly Korda and the US Women's Open at Riviera On the women's side the US Women's Open at Riviera is the biggest stage of the season. Nelly Korda is the dominant player in women's golf right now — the standard against which everyone else is being measured. Charley Hull and Gaby Lopez are among the names worth watching. The conversation around who is in the mix and who has the game to win at Riviera is one of the most compelling in women's golf in years. Justin Ray — the Tiger Woods of golf research — brings the data and the historical context that puts every name and every number in the proper perspective. Rory and Scottie Ahead of Shinnecock On the men's side the conversation heading into the US Open starts and ends with two names. Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler. Rory is riding one of the great stretches of his career — Masters champion, runner-up at the PGA Championship, and now heading to Shinnecock with the kind of momentum that makes every golf fan believe this could be the year he completes something historic. Scottie Scheffler is the number one player in the world and the standard of consistency that nobody else in the game can match right now. What does Shinnecock demand from both of them? What does the course favor? What does the history of this venue tell us about who wins and who struggles? Trey and Justin get into all of it. Fan Questions The Golf Live community brings their biggest questions heading into the two biggest weeks of the golf season. Katrina pulls from the channel and the audience gets answers directly from Trey and Justin in real time. The bottom line Two weeks. Two majors. The US Women's Open at Riviera and the US Open at Shinnecock Hills. The most compelling stretch of the golf calendar is here and Golf Live has everything you need to follow every shot of it. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

9. juni 202656 min
episode Tim Legler on Jalen Brunson Wemby and Why the NBA Finals Are Delivering Everything the League Needed artwork

Tim Legler on Jalen Brunson Wemby and Why the NBA Finals Are Delivering Everything the League Needed

Tim Legler on Jalen Brunson Wemby and Why the NBA Finals Are Delivering Everything the League Needed Go to https://kachava.com and use code WINGO for 15% off your first order. The NBA Finals are here. And for the first time in a long time the league has exactly what it needed — the biggest media market in the country, a generational talent making his finals debut, a point guard built for the biggest stage, and two games that have already delivered the kind of finishes that make casual fans into obsessives. Tim Legler — one of the most respected analysts in the business and someone who has seen every version of this league over three decades — joins Trey to break down everything happening in the NBA Finals. Jalen Brunson. Victor Wembanyama. The Knicks as a buzzsaw. The Spurs' path back. The face of the league question. The new media deal. The ticket prices at MSG. All of it. Jalen Brunson — The Quality Nobody Could Evaluate Tim Legler will be the first one to admit it. He missed on Jalen Brunson's ceiling as much as any player he has ever evaluated. He knew Brunson was going to be an NBA player. He thought the ceiling was a starting point guard on a mid-level team or a backup on an elite one — which is exactly what Brunson was in Dallas. What Legler missed — what almost everyone missed — is the quality that is almost impossible to put on a scouting report. What Brunson does under extreme pressure is genuinely different from most players in the league. Most players speed up. They overthink. They get sped up and out of rhythm at the worst possible moments. Brunson slows down. He compartmentalizes. He processes the game at a pace that is completely disconnected from the pressure around him. That is the quality that does not show up in a physical profile. That is why he went in the second round. And that is why the Knicks believe — no matter the situation, no matter the deficit — if they can get the ball in his hands in the final five minutes they have a great chance to win. The Atlanta series — down two to one — was the turning point. The Knicks tweaked their offense by running more actions through Carl Anthony Towns as a passer and facilitator rather than just a scorer. Towns bought in immediately despite seeing his scoring numbers drop. Mikhail Bridges found his cutting lanes. And the belief that now runs through this entire roster started in that moment and has never left. The Knicks have not lost a game since April 23rd. They have been a buzzsaw — a wood chipper as Legler puts it — destroying everything in front of them. And at the center of all of it is a second-round pick who was supposed to be a backup on an elite team and has become the most clutch player in the postseason. Victor Wembanyama — Overthinking the Moment The other side of this series is equally fascinating. Victor Wembanyama is twenty-two years old in his first NBA Finals. And through two games he has not been himself. Legler's diagnosis is direct. Paralysis by analysis. The shots are there — pull-up mid-range jumpers, deeper shots off the catch, the short roll after ball screens. He is not taking them. The Knicks are getting into his driving lanes with big physical wings that can contest his path to the rim. The move that works against most defenders in the regular season — pump fake, get in the gap, use the length to finish — is not available against this defense. The fix is simple to identify if harder to execute. Attack early. Get shots up. Shoot yourself into rhythm and confidence. Once Wemby gets going the entire Spurs team relaxes — a star getting rolling early calms every role player on the floor because they can stay within themselves instead of expanding to compensate. Right now he is doing the opposite — setting screens and going immediately to the rim without reading what is there, or popping out to twenty-eight feet without really threatening. Neither is optimal. He has everything you could want in a player. Seven-five wingspan. A high release nobody can contest. A mid-range game that is automatic when he is in rhythm. The shot is there. He just has to take it. The League Needed This The NBA regular season was genuinely difficult. Injuries dominated the conversation from October through April. Stars missed games. Marquee matchups fell apart before they started. And there were legitimate questions about whether the league's momentum was real or fragile heading into the playoffs. Then the playoffs happened. Two months of the best basketball on earth. Stars healthy. Matchups delivering. Finishes that kept people watching until the final buzzer. And now a Finals with the biggest media market in the country on one side and the most unique player anyone has ever seen on the other. The ratings say everything. Up approximately ninety percent from the previous year — a year when every Finals game except game seven was outrated by the NFL's Hall of Fame preseason game where no starters play. The combination of New York and Wembanyama is what the league has been building toward and it has delivered immediately. The Knicks have not won a championship in fifty-three years. The franchise. The city. The fan base. All of it has been waiting for exactly this moment. And Madison Square Garden — already the most famous arena in sports — has become something entirely different in these playoffs. The energy is unlike anything the postseason has produced in years. The Face of the League Question Wemby. Cooper Flagg. Luka. The question of who carries the NBA into its next era is real and Legler addresses each directly. Wemby has the intrigue, the uniqueness, and the talent. The challenge right now is comfort level with the media — he is still developing that trust and openness. He is young and foreign-born and takes his time before answering questions because he wants to give you something substantive. That quality — as a person and as a player — will only grow. When it does the complete package will be there for the entire country to fall in love with. Cooper Flagg has everything on the court — the competitive nature, the all-around game, the natural media presence. But he is on a team in full transition with roster and coaching questions. It will take time to stack wins and get deep into playoffs. Luka has been to a Finals. But the Lakers are navigating the post-LeBron era in a Western Conference where Oklahoma City and San Antonio are not going anywhere. Whether Luka can build a championship contender in that environment remains the central question of his career. The Business — Media Deals and Ticket Prices The new NBA media landscape brought in Amazon and NBC while Turner moved out. The result in year one — fans confused about where to find the games they want to watch. Legler is sympathetic but not alarmed. The landscape of entertainment has changed across the board and year two will be smoother. The content is there. You just have to work a little harder to find it. The ticket prices are a separate conversation. Eight thousand dollars for the cheapest seat at Madison Square Garden for a Finals game. Six figures for the lower bowl. Josh Hart said publicly it is unfortunate for the die-hard fans who have waited fifty-three years. Legler's response — supply and demand. One hundred and one. Unfortunate for fans going through third-party sellers but when the market commands those prices for a fifty-three-year wait and a series this compelling that is simply what it is. Tim Legler on His Golf Game One more thing — the cobwebs on the clubs in the garage, the four-and-a-half-year-old son who changed the equation, the plan to get the little guy into golf before any other sport, and the shared Halloween obsession that has the new neighborhood on notice. This is Tim Legler. One of the best analysts in the business. On the best Finals in years. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

9. juni 202638 min