Tiger Woods was part of the merger talks Thursday between the PGA Tour and Saudi-funded LIV Golf, which has stalled for the past two years.
There is a general belief that talks between PGA Tour Enterprises and the Public Information Fund are moving closer to a long-awaited agreement
PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia meet with President Trump to get a deal done.
The PGA Tour holds "constructive" White House talks with US president Donald Trump and LIV Golf chair Yasir Al-Rumayyan over the "reunification" of golf.
PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, Tiger Woods. Adam Scott and Saudi Arabia PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan met at the White House on Feb. 20.
PGA Tour officials met with President Donald Trump at the White House on Thursday for a fresh round of talks over a merger with LIV Golf - but things apparently didn't go too well for them
Woods, a Tour policy board member who is serving on the Transaction Sub-Committee, said on Sunday’s broadcast on CBS of the Genesis Invitational that another meeting to discuss the reunification of PGA Tour and LIV Golf, as well as a potential investment from the Saudis in the PGA Tour, was imminent.
The PGA Tour has described talks held at the White House with US President Donald Trump as constructive. The meeting took place on Thursday and involved PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, player directors Tiger Woods and Adam Scott,
Washington Post journalist Sally Jenkins took on the PGA Tour-PIF potential deal, discussing the money involved. A Substack publication, Money in Sport, reported in a February 13 th story that LIV Golf expenditures by its UK arm exceeded $1 billion. The total spending worldwide is above $3.9 billion and is projected to grow to $5 billion.
News broke on Thursday afternoon that the PGA Tour and the PIF were meeting at the White House with President Donald Trump, presumably to negotiate a deal for golf unification. Tiger Woods, Adam Scott, and Commissioner Jay Monahan were among the members ...