Pathways back to PGA for LIV golfers discussed ‘daily’ — Woods

Tiger Woods speaks during a news conference for the Genesis Invitational golf tournament at Riviera Country Club Wednesday in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles. (AP)
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Updated 15 February 2024
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Pathways back to PGA for LIV golfers discussed ‘daily’ — Woods

  • Tiger Woods: Ultimately we would like to have PIF be a part of our tour and a part of our product
  • Woods said Wednesday that SSG brings the know-how to improve the PGA Tour “entertainment product” while honoring the history and traditions of the tour
  • The discussion continues as the PGA Tour forges ahead with its new partnership with Strategic Sports Group (SSG) — a consortium of billionaire sports team owners that agreed a $3 billion deal with the tour

LOS ANGELES: The contentious issue of how players who embraced the LIV Golf League might return to the US PGA Tour as the global game evolves remains under “daily” discussion, superstar Tiger Woods said Wednesday.

“We’re looking into all the different models for pathways back,” Woods said at a press conference on the eve of the Genesis Invitational at The Riviera Country Club, where he’s set to play his first official PGA Tour event since the Masters last April.

“What that looks like, what the impact is for the players who have stayed and who have not left and how we make our product better going forward, there is no answer to that right now.”

Four-time major champion Rory McIlroy, long a critic of LIV Golf, said in January that he believed golf needs to reunite top players, even it delays sorting out any penalties for those who abandoned the established PGA Tour and DP World Tour for the big money offered by the league backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF)

However, at the Phoenix Open last week, Scottie Scheffler and Justin Thomas joined the list of players insisting that LIV golfers — including two-time major winner Dustin Johnson and reigning Masters champion Jon Rahm — should face some consequences for their defections.

“I want the best product and the best players,” Thomas said. “I would say that there’s a handful of players on LIV that would make the tour a better place, but I’m definitely not in the agreement that they should just be able to come back that easily.”

Scheffler, meanwhile, said he thought it would be an unpopular decision to let LIV golfers come back “like nothing ever happened.”

Woods, one of six player-directors on the US PGA Tour’s policy board, indicated the topic was a hot one.

“We’re looking at very different, varying degrees of ideas and what that looks like in the short term, we don’t know,” he said of a potential plan for reintegrating LIV players. “We don’t even know in the longer term what that looks like.

“Trust me, there’s daily, weekly emails and talks about this and what this looks like for our tour going forward.”

The discussion continues as the PGA Tour forges ahead with its new partnership with Strategic Sports Group (SSG) — a consortium of billionaire sports team owners that agreed a $3 billion deal with the tour to create a for-profit commercial entity that will allow nearly 200 PGA Tour players the chance to become equity holders.

Woods said Wednesday that SSG brings the know-how to improve the PGA Tour “entertainment product” while honoring the history and traditions of the tour.

While the deal with SSG is done, Woods said the hope was to complete negotiations to make the PIF “part of our tour and a part of our product.”

The PGA Tour has been negotiating with PIF since June, when the details of a framework merger agreement were announced to the astonishment of PGA Tour players, who had no idea such a plan was in the works.

“Ultimately we would like to have PIF be a part of our tour and a part of our product,” Woods said.


FIFA announces $60 World Cup tickets after pricing backlash

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FIFA announces $60 World Cup tickets after pricing backlash

PARIS: World Cup organizers unveiled a new cut-price ticket category on Tuesday after a backlash by fans over pricing for the 2026 tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Football’s global governing body FIFA said in a statement that it had created a limited number of “Supporter Entry Tier” fixed at $60 for all 104 matches, including the final.
It said the plan was “designed to further support traveling fans following their national teams across the tournament.”
FIFA said that the $60  tickets would be reserved for fans of qualified teams and would make up 10 percent of each national federation’s allotment.
Fan group Football Supporters Europe , which last week called prices “extortionate” and “astronomical,” responded by saying the FIFA was offering too little.
“While we welcome FIFA’s seeming recognition of the damage its original plans were to cause, the revisions do not go far enough,” FSE said in a statement on Tuesday.
Last week, FSE said ticket prices were almost five times higher than in 2022 in Qatar, describing FIFA’s pricing for 2026 as a “monumental betrayal of the tradition of the World Cup.”
“If a supporter were to follow their team from the first match to the final it would cost them a minimum of $6,900,” it said at the time, adding that World Cup organizers had promised tickets priced from $21 in a bid document released in 2018.

‘Appeasement tactic’

On Tuesday, FSE said FIFA’s partial ticketing U-turn exposed flaws in how prices for next year’s tournament had been set.
“For the moment we are looking at the FIFA announcement as nothing more than an appeasement tactic due to the global negative backlash,” FSE said.
“This shows that FIFA’s ticketing policy is not set in stone, was decided in a rush, and without proper consultation — including with FIFA’s own member associations.
“Based on the allocations publicly available, this would mean that at best a few hundred fans per match and team would be lucky enough to take advantage of the 60 US dollar prices, while the vast majority would still have to pay extortionate prices, way higher than at any tournament before.”
The organization also criticized the failure to make provisions for supporters with disabilities or their companions.
Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer echoed FSE, stating that FIFA’s cheaper ticket category did not go far enough.
“I welcome FIFA’s announcement of some lower priced supporters tickets,” Starmer wrote on X.
“But as someone who used to save up for England tickets, I encourage FIFA to do more to make tickets more affordable so that the World Cup doesn’t lose touch with the genuine supporters who make the game so special.”
Announcing the $60 tickets on Tuesday, FIFA said that national federations “are requested to ensure that these tickets are specifically allocated to loyal fans who are closely connected to their national teams.”
FIFA also said that if fans bought tickets for games in the knockout rounds only to find their team eliminated at an earlier stage, they “will have the administrative fee waived when refunds are processed.”
It added that it was making the announcement “amid extraordinary global demand for tickets” with 20 million requests already submitted.
The draw for tickets of all prices in the first round of sales will take place on Tuesday, January 13.