For almost 30 years, through the 1970s,
Arnold Palmer was a unique figure on the PGA Tour, winning 62 events including
seven “majors” and exciting fan interest as have few other golfers before or
since.
Those
comparisons nicely illustrate how far men’s professional golf has come financially
in the last several decades. The PGA
Tour, the main vehicle in the sport, is awash in money, and its competitors
have it better than few other athletes. They spend their working days in
sunshine on manicured green acres, enjoying country-club amenities. Corporate CEOs envy their lifestyles as well
as their swings.
But while one might think all would
be well in Tourland, such is not the case, at least lately. There’s a rival
tour aborning, offering more money for less work, and its existence has
unearthed some long-standing gripes among the Tourists. The interloper is the
LIV Tour, which is scheduled to debut June 9 at a course near London, England.
Its supposed to be the first of eight scheduled tournaments—five of them in the
U.S.-- with total prize purses of $25 million or more for each. LIV is Roman numerals for 54, the number of
holes to be contested in each event. That’s down from the PGA Tour’s 72-hole
standard, and where the “less work” comes in. The PGA has decreed that any
player who enters an LIV outing will lose his Tour card, so the war is on.
That would make for an interesting
clash straight up, but there’s a wrinkle that has kidnapped news-media
attention. The angel for the new tour is the sovereign wealth fund of oil-rich Saudi
Arabia, ostensibly a nation but really a business wholly owned by its ruling
family. The current Saudi government,
led by Crown Price Mohammad bin Salman, wages bloody war in Yemen and murders
its domestic critics, casting a stink over its international reputation. Thus,
endorsement of its golf tour has been equated with approval of Saudi policies
and practices, and the few who have spoken out for it have suffered obloquy.
These include Greg Norman, the old Aussie golf
great who is the new tour’s chief executive, and Phil Mickelson, a heretofore
popular PGA Tour competitor. Mickelson has called the Saudi regime “scary
motherfuckers” but said it was worth cozying up to it to gain “leverage” in his
financial arguments with the PGA Tour.
The criticism that comment engendered caused him to skip defending his 2021
PGA Championship title last month and go into virtual hiding.
The Tour’s internal disputes are
interesting because, unlike team sports, professional golf in the U.S. has no
“owners.” Instead, it’s managed by a legally non-profit organization nominally
run by the players themselves, who function on the links as independent
contractors. The PGA of America was founded in 1916 as an umbrella organization
representing all golf pros, but by 1968 its tournament function had become so important
that it spun it off as a separate entity. Today the PGA Tour is a golf behemoth
that runs the 48-event main circuit that awards more than $500 million in prize
and bonus money, the Champions Tour for players 50 years old and older, and
several developmental tours, and negotiates multi-billion-dollar TV contracts,
just like its team-sport counterparts.
Its governing body is the nine-member
Tour Policy Board, four of whose members hold active Tour cards, but like most large
organizations it’s really run by its bureaucracy, currently headed by Jay
Monahan, a former functionary of the sports-agency octopus IMG. Like other
sports-organization leaders, he has the title of “commissioner,” although no
commission exists.
Even with its soaring purse
structure tournament-golf pros don’t earn much by today’s jock standards; in
the 2019-20 season, the last full one pre-covid, only 12 Tour players had more
than $5 million in prize-money earnings, about the annual salary of a backup
catcher in Major League Baseball. Golf, however, is an expensive sport that affords
opportunities for outside income that allows players to multiply by several
times their annual tournament income. The 175 men who hold PGA Tour cards, and
thus can count on television appearances, can sell their endorsements of just
about everything they use or wear, and do so enthusiastically.
Until 2016, top players typically
signed agreements wrapping most equipment and apparel into a single package.
Then Nike, the sport’s biggest sponsor, pulled out of golf. Now the deals have
atomized, with items such as clubs, balls, bags, shoes and cap and shirt logos
negotiated separately. Apparently, Tour players
like the new order just fine; things are so good that one, Ryan Palmer (not a
relative of Arnold), recently wondered aloud why the “couple hundred thousand
dollars” he could get for a clubs’ endorsement was worth it if it kept him from
using clubs he was “comfortable with.”
The major rub, according to
Mickelson in several interviews, is TV rights for things like highlight films
and as they apply to the new and burgeoning “social media.” The Tour currently
retains these, but he’d like the players to control theirs individually. Those
are a big deal, as witnessed by the seven-figure sums some college athletes suddenly
are corralling through their control over their names, images and likenesses. You’ll
be hearing more about this issue in the months to come.
The LIV Tour apparently will go off as planned, with a handful of “name” players committed, even though Mickelson seems to have fled
the field. Lawsuits against the PGA Tour’s ban edict have been threatened. Be
assured, though, that the money being dangled will entice others to appear, whatever
its source.
If you pay them, they will come.
3 comments:
Hi Fred. I like the idea of competition, among players and rival leagues as well. Good luck to LIV.
What do we call th LIV? The 54? The Live?
Could give less than one rat's arse. 🥸
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