'Golf reimagined': TGL circuit backed by Woods and McIlroy tees off
Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy unveil their futuristic Tomorrow's Golf League on Tuesday, hoping the tech-infused competition will capture the imagination of tour pros and a new global fan base.
"This is what we've been shooting for," 15-time major champion Woods said last month as he looked forward to the competition debut, which was delayed by a year after a roof collapse at the SoFi Center venue in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.
"We're trying to bring a new demographic to this game of golf, and it's going to be exciting," Woods said, adding he was "blown away at the amount of moving parts there is to this.
"As a showcase, it's going to be unbelievable on TV," Woods said. "I hope that we can invigorate the game because it definitely needs it right now."
McIlroy, speaking to TGL's US broadcaster ESPN, called the venture "golf, but reimagined".
"Sort of trying to take golf into the 21st century," McIlroy said. "We have teams. Obviously there's a lot of technology involved, trying to bring it into the digital era.
"A lot of things that we've taken from other sports, like a shot clock, a timeout, things that you don't see in regular golf... trying to appeal to that bigger sports audience out there."
It's no accident that the league, which will feature 24 US PGA Tour players divided into six teams competing once a week over several months, was announced as the game grappled with the global rift between the upstart LIV Golf circuit and the established US and European tours.
While the rhetoric has calmed, plans to actually bring the warring factions back together remain stalled.
Woods and McIlroy, along with ESPN, British broadcaster Sky Sports and a string of heavyweight investors are hoping the combination of golf skill and technical