Rory McIlroy believes reunifying with players who defected to Saudi-funded LIV Golf is what's best for the PGA Tour membership and “everyone's just got to get over it” and move forward. Adam Scott will understand if there's still bad feelings.
Adam Scott expects at least some PGA Tour members to be upset if some sort of reunification of the sport happens in the near future. Scott, who is the Tour’s Player Advisory Council chairman and joined commissioner Jay Monahan at the White House earlier this month to discuss negotiations with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and LIV Golf,
Commissioner Jay Monahan and player directors Tiger Woods and Adam Scott are meeting with officials at the White House on Thursday as discussions for a PGA Tour-LIV Golf merger continue, sources tell ESPN.
The LIV Golf tour recently announced an extension with their LIV Adelaide event until 2031, which pointed towards LIV continuing to host international events. Obviously PGA player
Rory McIlroy believes reunifying with players who defected to Saudi-funded LIV Golf is what's best for the PGA Tour membership and “everyone's just got to get over it” and move forward.
With talks of the PGA Tour and LIV Golf joining forces, Adam Scott says it may not be ‘rainbows and unicorns’ after all.
Adam Scott thinks there will be some hard feelings if LIV golfers are welcomed back onto the PGA Tour. “I wouldn’t be surprised—or I wouldn’t judge anyone, the members—if reunification happened and they weren’t happy with how it happened,
Tiger Woods said he believes the professional game will “heal very quickly” if and when the PGA Tour can come to an agreement with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund as negotiations between the two entities continue.
Thursday’s first round of the Genesis Invitational brought about brutal conditions: temperatures in the 50s, a nagging drizzle, and a chilly, vicious wind out of the south. Players had no choice but to bundle up,
PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, Tiger Woods. Adam Scott and Saudi Arabia PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan met at the White House on Feb. 20.
President Donald Trump has already met with PGA Tour leaders, and McIlroy, Adam Scott and others predicted that the White House will make a quick impact.
Tiger Woods joined PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and player director Adam Scott in a second White House meeting on Thursday, another sign the sport is moving rapidly toward ending the division brought on by Saudi-funded LIV Golf.