More often then not the leader is playing conservative to protect a lead because everyone else is done. There's a reason most other sports are going to all the games finishing at the same time so no team can have an advantage or sandbag.
Well said. The Tour hasn't covered itself in glory but people who act like there was some uncontroversial way to reorganize the Tour that the actual players themselves all agreed upon are crazy. The Tour was in the shape its in because there are at least 3 different player factions with completely different and diametrically opposed goals.aggiegolfer2012 said:
Listen, I don't like the TOUR
They've screwed up on a lot
Their screw up wasn't missing on the Saudis, because I think there are legitimate reasons not to take that money. Their screw up was not listening to the private equity that brought the same type of ideas and getting out of the 501c6 model.
But all that stems back to their structure and allowing all 200 members equal power. Hindsight says they should've done something different, but they would have never had the votes to restructure because the bottom 65% of the tour that nobody would recognize in an airport are making way more money than they are worth off the back of the top 10%.
how about an end of season super bowl of golf between LIV and PGAT players Ryder Cup style. Saudi's could make a gazillion dollar purse for the winner. That would be interesting to watch.guadalupeag said:
And choosing to hold your championship rounds right in the middle of football season…genius
98Ag99Grad said:
Wells Fargo is ending their sponsorship after this years tournament. That was one of the designated events last year. Another shot to the tour in their negotiations.
If they do, I can't help but believe that Jay Monahan will be out the door.98Ag99Grad said:
Yeah you can't offer the same product for twice the price to the sponsor. Was only a matter of time. Interested to see if others follow like Travelers, RBC, etc.
JCA1 said:98Ag99Grad said:
Wells Fargo is ending their sponsorship after this years tournament. That was one of the designated events last year. Another shot to the tour in their negotiations.
Rumor is they wanted to stay on but balked at the tour's asking price.
For those talking about how the tour miraculously came up with more money for purses, this was how. They asked their sponsors for it. Some are now dropping out as a result because the math just doesn't work.
Golf's economics are completely screwed right now because they are completely untethered to reality. Unless you're Rahm's son, I just don't see how you can be rooting for this.
DannyDuberstein said:
What's interesting to me is how many cheering this would feel if it was the US government that decided to get into the sports business and use a money printer to try to dismantle an american sports league by signing away as many of its best players as possible. People would flip the **** out and not just because of it being tax dollars. It would he "how dare you try to destroy private business with the weight of the power you own"?
AustinCountyAg said:
Finau is the latest name to be connected to LIV. I expect the PGAT to cave very soon and merge with LIV. If LIV keeps throwing money at the upper tier guys and they leave PGAT will have no credibility left. If I was the PGAT I'd be more worried about losing the guys ranked around the top 30-50 instead of guys ranked in the top 15 in the world.
4 day tournament would be funny. Would they change their name to the LXXII tour?Aggie369 said:
Should see a few more big names to LIV soon
I'll share names when it's ok to do so
Might go to a 4 day tournament as well, which would be funny
JCA1 said:
The Tour's biggest screw up is they somehow didn't recognize that they were sitting at a poker table with $500 in chips and the PIF sat down with $100,000 and was going to force them to go all-in every single hand if they wanted to play. You gotta recognize when you're in that situation and they apparently didn't. In that sense, PIF out-maneuvered them but it's not some brilliant negotiation tactic. They have the luxury to money-whip that the Tour doesn't.
At this point, I just hope this brings them both back to the table to finalize an agreement. The alternative is fractured golf for God knows how long.