Questions abound as PGA Tour, LIV Golf aim to co-exist in 2024

Professional golf appeared poised to end 2023 with the PGA Tour and LIV Golf in lockstep after two years of animosity, attrition, ill will and legal action. A framework agreement announced in June and was set for approval on Sunday aimed to conjoin two warring tours, along with the DP World (European) Tour.

The PGA Tour, DP World Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund extended the self-imposed deadline for the new venture tentatively called PGA Tour Enterprises.

Whatever happens, questions will remain.

During the Dec. 16-17 PNC Championship in Orlando, several of the top golfers in recent decades spoke to the Orlando Sentinel about several topics surrounding the sport’s most fractious period of the modern era.

Is there enough audience and interest for two high-level tours to coexist?

PNC winner Bernhard Langer and Nick Faldo were at the top of their games during the European Tour’s heyday in the 1980s and 1990s when Hall of Famers Seve Ballesteros, Sandy Lyle, Jose Maria Olazabal and Colin Montgomerie were also among the world’s top players. Across the Atlantic Ocean, the PGA Tour had its share of stars and big events.

“We had a period at the end of the ‘80s we had 5 of the top 8 [ranked golfers],” Faldo, 66, said. “We were strong.”

Yet other than the biennial Ryder Cup the tours went about their business bereft of tension between them.

Saudi-financed LIV Golf’s emergence in late 2022 brought a different dynamic and competition for top golfers. Among the PGA Tour players who left to cash in are three of past five major champions (Jon Rahm, Brooks Koepka, Cam Smith), top attraction Bryson DeChambeau, former world No. 1 Dustin Johnson and living legend Phil Mickelson.

A niche sport with a limited dedicated audience outside the major championships now attempts to produce two appealing tours.

“The risk is the financial backing they have at LIV, they don’t need to be compelling,” former Tour star Jim Furyk said. “The PGA Tour has to be compelling. We have to be the premiere tour in the world to stay the same.”

During Langer’s prime, two tours thrived before Tiger Woods and Mickelson shifted the balance of power, marginalized the Euros and carried the sport to new heights of popularity.

“Is it good for the game of golf?” Langer, 66, said. “We’ll find out in 10 or 15 years.”

Faldo, an analyst for CBS from 2006-22, said the current model is unsustainable.

“We’re too thin between three tours: LIV, PGA Tour and Europe,” he said. “The ultimate solution is to have a world tour where you get 120 players traveling the world … playing about 20 events, plus the majors. There’s too much golf.