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Consider This from NPR

The PGA LIV Golf Deal Is All About The Green

Consider This from NPR

NPR

News, Daily News, Society & Culture, News Commentary

4.26.2K Ratings

🗓️ 11 June 2023

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For more than a year the PGA, the world's leading pro golf league, has basically been at war with the upstart Saudi-funded LIV Golf league. Lawsuits and countersuits were filed as the the leagues competed for marquee golfers and control of the narrative around the game. Some PGA players resisted big paydays to join LIV because they were critical of the Saudi Public Investment Fund, the source of the league's seemingly endless supply of money. But last week, the two leagues announced a plan to join forces.

Though the deal has yet to be finalized, it's already faced backlash from players who remain loyal to the tour, and from human rights activists who see this as an attempt by the Saudi government to use sports to draw attention away from their record of human rights abuses.

NPR's Susan Davis speaks with Sally Jenkins, a sports columnist for the Washington Post, who wrote a column critical of the merger, and Terry Strada, who chairs the group 9/11 Families United, which represents thousands of surviving family members of those killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks. Strada has been one of the most vocal critics of the plan.

We also hear from Doug Greenberg, a writer for the sports news site Front Office Sports, who says the Saudi-backed league has actually been good for golf.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

It was just a year ago, you might remember, the first live golf event was held, sending

0:13.0

shockwaves through the game that shattered long-held structures, partnerships and relationships.

0:19.4

For over the past year, it was the PGA, the world's pre-eminent pro-Goff League, versus

0:24.2

live, a Saudi Arabia-funded upstart.

0:26.8

Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent, there have been lawsuits and counter-law

0:31.6

suits, players leaving one league for the other.

0:34.3

You were live golf or you were not.

0:37.2

But that may be changing.

0:39.1

This week, the PGA joined forces with live golf.

0:42.3

The move would effectively combine the PGA's marketing power, TV contracts and cultural footprint

0:47.8

with Saudi financing, and Saudi's public investment fund governor Yasir Al-Romayan would

0:53.0

head their board of directors.

0:54.8

The move has rocked the world of golf, where even players were kept in the dark, including

0:59.7

PGA tour winner Brendan Todd speaking to golf today.

1:03.4

Yeah, I just sat up and be on the shutter rod back from the range and opened my email and

1:06.8

saw the letter from the commissioner.

1:08.6

Safe to say we're all pretty surprised out here.

1:10.9

While both organizations had a history of acrimony, the New Yorker Zach Helfen told MPR

1:15.9

the move makes sense.

1:17.6

The Saudis wanted a golf tour.

1:20.8

They wanted power and prestige, and they had a lot of money.

1:24.2

And the PGA tour was always happy to take a lot of money, and they had a golf tour to

...

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