SUGAR GROVE, Ill. — As LIV Golf prepares to stage its fifth tournament, which is outside of Chicago this week, CEO and commissioner Greg Norman said the upstart circuit has no desire to talk with the rival PGA Tour about a truce.
LIV Golf, financed by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, has been in a fierce battle with the PGA Tour for the best golfers in the world for much of this year.
Norman said he tried to talk to PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan in the past about trying to figure out how the leagues can co-exist, but Norman says he's no longer interested in doing so. «We have no interest in sitting down with them, to be honest with you, because our product is working,» Norman told The Australian in an interview this week.
Monahan has been unwilling to sit down with LIV Golf even after several past major championship winners, including Cameron Smith, Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka and Bubba Watson, were lured to the new circuit with signing bonuses reportedly worth as much as $100 million to $200 million. «That's why we are where we are today,» Norman said. «We tried awfully hard — I know I did personally for the past year.… When we knew we were never going to hear from them, we just decided to go.» More than two dozen PGA Tour members have defected to LIV Golf, including a handful that have resigned their memberships.