
While the golf word is focused on the 150th playing of the Open Championship at historic St. Andrews, the ongoing feud between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf Series continues as the United States government now is getting involved.
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has opened an investigation into the PGA Tour’s handing of their players, specifically how they responded to the threat posed by the LIV Golf Series.
After just two events the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Series has been a clear thorn in the side of the PGA Tour, with several long-time PGA Tour members and major champions leaving the Tour and pledging their allegiance to LIV and the guaranteed paydays.
In response, the PGA Tour has suspended players who joined LIV and has tweaked their upcoming PGA Tour schedule, while also increasing prize money.
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan has called LIV “an irrational threat trying to buy the game of golf, not grow it.”
He also doesn’t seem concerned about the DOJ investigation.
“This was not unexpected,” said the PGA Tour in a statement. “We went through this in 1994, and are are confident in a similar outcome.”
In 1994, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission investigated the PGA Tour to see if they violated American laws by requiring players to gain the PGA TOUR commissioner’s permission to play in outside events and appear in non-PGA Tour programs. The PGA Tour was fully exonerated.

The DOJ is specifically interested in how the PGA Tour’s actions will affect a player’s standing in the Official World Golf Ranking. Currently no ranking points are awarded for LIV events which will negatively affect a player’s ability to qualify for major championships and the Olympic Games, among other events.
Greg Norman, a World Golf Hall of Fame member and LIV Golf chief executive, has been very outspoken against the PGA Tour and their attempts to combat LIV.
Last February, Norman wrote Monahan a letter saying, “When you try to bluff and intimidate players by bullying and threatening them, you are guilty of going too far, being unfair and you likely are in violation of the law.”
Norman has long proposed the idea of a “world golf tour” dating back to the 1990s, with the idea of players being free agents and allowed to compete wherever and whenever they want.
The PGA Tour allows their players to receive a conflicting event release to play in three events per year, but they must be outside of North America. The LIV Golf Series has five events scheduled for North America this year, including the recently held event in Oregon. The next LIV event is July 29-31 in New Jersey.
Últimas Noticias
Sinner-Alcaraz, the duel that came to succeed the three phenomenons
Beyond the final result, Roland Garros left the feeling that the Italian and the Spaniard will shape the great duel that came to help us through the duel for the end of the Federer-Nadal-Djokovic era.
Table tennis: Brazil’s Bruna Costa Alexandre will be Olympic and Paralympic in Paris 2024
She is the third in her sport and the seventh athlete to achieve it in the same edition; in Santiago 2023 she was the first athlete with disabilities to compete at the Pan American level and won a medal.

Rugby 7s: the best player of 2023 would only play the medal match in Paris
Argentinian Rodrigo Isgró received a five-game suspension for an indiscipline in the circuit’s decisive clash that would exclude him until the final or the bronze match; the Federation will seek to make the appeal successful.

Rhonex Kipruto, owner of the world record for the 10000 meters on the road, was suspended for six years
The Kenyan received the maximum sanction for irregularities in his biological passport and the Court considered that he was part of a system of “deliberate and sophisticated doping” to improve his performance. He will lose his record and the bronze medal at the Doha World Cup.

Katie Ledecky spoke about doping Chinese swimmers: “It’s difficult to go to Paris knowing that we’re going to compete with some of these athletes”
The American, a seven-time Olympic champion, referred to the case of the 23 positive controls before the Tokyo Games that were announced a few weeks ago and shook the swimming world. “I think our faith in some of the systems is at an all-time low,” he said.
