Why pro golfers might soon make less money

The landscape for the golf equipment business looks grim at the moment. Adidas announced in May it is looking to sell off TaylorMade, its golf club brand that was once the category leader; Nike announced in August it’s halting its own golf club business completely.

Those announcements have already prompted change. Jason Day, the world’s No. 1 golfer, has an existing deal with TaylorMade for clubs but has signed a new deal with Nike just for apparel, which he is able to do because Nike is no longer a competitor as a club-maker. Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods, who are both signed to Nike Golf, are both suddenly left without club deals, so other club-makers have aggressively wooed them.

McIlroy recently practiced with TaylorMade clubs. If he were to use them at his next tournament without a paid deal, it would represent a new normal for the world’s No. 2 golfer.

Nike, Adidas exits mean fewer equipment deals

Pat Perez, a PGA Tour veteran who missed this golf season due to shoulder surgery, says the problems in the equipment business will quickly take a hit on the wallets of the players. Nike and Adidas leaving the business is “massive,” he tells Yahoo Finance, “because now other companies are going to have to try to make up the difference, but there’s just not enough money to pay all these guys, they just can’t do it.” Equipment deals in golf, depending on the stature of the player, can reach the single-digit millions each year.

There is still Callaway for clubs (ELY), and Titleist (GOLF) for balls, but Callaway isn’t going to spend to endorse every PGA Tour player in the top 30. With Nike and Adidas (eventually) not making clubs, it means fewer brands to sign golfers to club deals.

Of course, even if they aren’t being paid to use a brand’s clubs, pro golfers still have to play, and they’re going to play with clubs. “So even with TaylorMade trying to get sold and Nike going out, the game is still going to be there,” Perez says. “The guys aren’t going to be making as much money as they could have been, but the game will go on. The PGA Tour is doing fantastic, we’re playing for a lot of money as it is—I think the game will be just fine.”

Promoting Bill Murray’s golf apparel line

While the equipment (clubs and balls) business is in the rough, apparel is a different story. Nike Golf will still make clothes and shoes, and Adidas Golf will still make clothes and shoes. The apparel side still has enough appeal that the actor Bill Murray and his brothers have just launched their own golf clothing line, William Murray Golf.

Perez is the first pro ambassador for Murray’s label. The long-haired 40-year-old, who tied for 6th at the PGA Championship in 2005, is a colorful personality and fitting choice for William Murray Golf. His antics on the course have often been divisive; in 2011, Golf magazine wrote that Perez’s tantrums “are an embarrassment.” During his time off this season, Perez created a music video, “Irons Aren’t Metal,” in which he sings lines like, “You’ll love my wood, I swing it real good.” Golf Digest wrote, “We’re not quite sure what to make of this Pat Perez music video.”