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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. 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