PGA Tour has ‘constructive’ meeting with Trump and LIV’s Al-Rumayyan over unification

President Donald Trump speaks as Tiger Woods listen during a reception for Black History Month in the East Room of the White House Thursday. (Pool via AP)
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Updated 21 February 2025
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PGA Tour has ‘constructive’ meeting with Trump and LIV’s Al-Rumayyan over unification

  • Tiger Woods among those at White House meeting
  • PGA Tour: Committed to moving as quickly as possible in talks

WASHINGTON: The PGA Tour said on Thursday it had a “constructive working session” at the White House with President Donald Trump and LIV Golf Chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan on efforts to resolve the schism that exists between the two professional golf bodies.

At the meeting with Trump and Al-Rumayyan, who is also the governor of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund that owns LIV Golf, were Tiger Woods and Adam Scott — both player directors on the PGA Tour’s policy board — and Commissioner Jay Monahan.

“We share a passion for the game and the importance of reunification,” Monahan, Woods and Scott said in a PGA Tour statement.

“Most importantly, we all want the best players in the world playing together more often and are committed to doing all we can to deliver that outcome for our fans.”

The PGA Tour also said it is committed to moving as quickly as possible and will share additional details later.

After the meeting, Woods, Monahan and Scott joined Trump for a Black History Month event but no significant details of the earlier golf meeting were revealed at the event.

“I’ve always tried to swing just like Adam. It never worked out that way,” said Trump, adding he “had some interesting discussions,” with the golfers.

Trump, an avid golfer who owns a string of golf resorts, has become more deeply involved in trying to end the years-long divide in golf and met at the White House with Monahan and 2013 Masters champion Scott just over two weeks ago.

The PGA Tour said on Feb. 6 that after a meeting with Trump it was closer to reaching a deal with the PIF, the Saudi backers of LIV Golf.

The US-based circuit had said Monahan and Scott met with Trump on Feb. 4 and asked him to get involved in their talks with the PIF.

Woods, a 15-time major winner, has been working with Scott and Monahan on the issue but missed the initial meeting because his mother had died recently.

 

Lucrative purses

LIV Golf attracted some of the world’s top golfers after it was founded in 2021. The best players from both LIV and the PGA Tour only compete against each other at golf’s four majors.

LIV Golf, which features no-cut, 54-hole events, held its inaugural event in June 2022, and through mega-money contracts and lucrative purses has since lured a number of golf’s biggest names, including major champions Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau.

After a year of acrimony, the PGA Tour, PIF and Europe-based DP World Tour announced a framework agreement in June 2023 to house their commercial operations in a new entity and set Dec. 31 of that year as a deadline to reach a definitive agreement.

The sides extended the deadline and as talks with the PIF dragged on, outside investor interest in the PGA Tour heated up by way of Strategic Sports Group, which invested an initial $1.5 billion into the for-profit entity PGA Tour Enterprises.

LIV Golf has played at courses owned by Trump since its inception and will do so again in 2025 with its April 4-6 event scheduled to be held at Trump National Doral in Miami.


Own goal enough for Al-Ahli as Matchday 24 win keeps pressure on Al-Nassr

Updated 27 February 2026
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Own goal enough for Al-Ahli as Matchday 24 win keeps pressure on Al-Nassr

  • Al-Ahli eke out 1-0 win over Al-Riyadh to keep pressure on Al-Nassr
  • Milan Borjan own goal separated the sides at Prince Faisal bin Fahd Stadium

RIYADH: Matchday 24 of the Saudi Pro League kicked off on Thursday, less than 24 hours after the conclusion of the delayed Matchday 10. With the FIFA Arab Cup, World Cup Qualifiers and FIFA World Cup sandwiching the 2025/26 campaign, resting periods have been few and far between outside the international breaks.

With fixtures coming thick and fast, Al-Ahli opted to rest Riyad Mahrez and Enzo Millot for their clash with Al-Riyadh in the capital. Ramadan has further challenged the league schedule, with Matthias Jaissle’s side only arriving in Riyadh at 5:30pm — just hours before kick-off.

With their previous outing against Damac still dominating conversation, Jaissle was keen to ensure his players did not fall into the same trap — namely, being caught off guard by an opponent’s unexpectedly proactive style.

To his relief, Al-Ahli were largely in control this time. Yet the absence of Mahrez limited their creative spark. Relying heavily on Wenderson Galeno down the left, Al-Riyadh did well to crowd the Brazilian and deny him space to operate.

The bane of any expansive side is a compact 5-4-1, and that is precisely how Al-Riyadh’s recently appointed Brazilian manager Mauricio Dulac set his team up. A long-time assistant to former Al-Riyadh coach Odair Hellmann, this marks Dulac’s first managerial role.

Al-Ahli’s attacking routes were severely restricted throughout the first half. Al-Riyadh denied them the opportunity to press high, Mahrez’s trademark diagonals were absent, and finding Ivan Toney in the six-yard box proved a difficult task.

On the rare occasions the visitors broke the defensive line, Milan Borjan stood firm in goal — there was no getting past the Canadian.

That was until first-half stoppage time. Al-Ahli had one more weapon in their arsenal: set-pieces. A lofted delivery from Galeno’s free-kick met the head of Roger Ibañez, who nodded the ball towards goal. Borjan pushed it away, but it was too late — the ball crossed the line.

VAR intervened within seconds. Ibañez was a shoulder offside, and the opener was chalked off. It was a notable twist, particulary as the simultaneous fixture between Al-Fateh and Damac in Al-Ahsa featured a celebration aimed squarely at Al-Ahli and VAR.

Earlier in the week, Damac equalised late against Al-Ahli via Yakou Méïté, only for the goal to be overturned. Méïté reacted angrily and lashed out at referees, but Al-Ahli escaped with the three points. Méïté followed up with a goal against Al-Fateh, and celebrated by mimicking the referee’s VAR signal.

Back in Riyadh, Al-Ahli returned for the second half with renewed intensity. Zakaria Hawsawi grew more adventurous from left-back, threading lofted balls over the Al-Riyadh defence.

In the 53rd minute, he found Toney behind the last defender, but the Englishman’s volley was adeptly saved by Borjan. Five minutes later, Galeno latched onto Hawsawi’s cross and thought he had broken the deadlock — only for the linesman’s flag to rise once again.

Al-Ahli pushed, but as time ticked away, it seemed the coveted winner would elude them. However, once again, set pieces proved decisive.

In the 75th minute, a corner from Saleh Abu Al-Shamat was parried by Borjan, only for his effort to be bundled into his own net, sending the travelling supporters into a frenzy.

After last week’s scare, Al-Ahli knew they had to finish the job. Cue Ibañez, who surged forward from deep before slipping the ball through to Toney to seal the game with what would have been his 24th goal of the season. The run itself deserved a goal, but Toney was flagged inches offside.

Despite another difficult outing, Al-Ahli did enough to secure a clean sheet and grind out a 1-0 victory to move top on 59 points — one ahead of Al-Nassr, who are yet to play this weekend.

Elsewhere, Méïté’s equaliser was later cancelled out by a 77th-minute Mourad Batna penalty, in a match that saw fans commemorate him for surpassing 100 goal contributions with Al-Fateh.

Batna had earlier missed from the spot to the frustation of the home fans, but Al-Fateh’s undefeated streak against Damac at home remains intact as the encounter ended 1-1.

Saudi Pro League action resumes on Friday, with Al-Hazem hosting Al-Ettifaq, Al-Ittihad welcoming Al-Khaleej, and one of Riyadh’s top derbies in Al-Shabab and Al-Hilal. All games kick-off at 10:00pm, in the league’s unified Ramadan schedule.