The Filmest | The LIV Golf Tour is in HUGE Trouble from the PGA After This! @thefilmest | Uploaded September 2022 | Updated October 2024, 18 hours ago.
The LIV Golf Tour is in HUGE Trouble from the PGA After This!
Welcome back to Sport Shock. Here’s some news for you about LIV’s lawsuit against PGA Tour. LIV Golf’s antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour is ongoing, but the field is getting smaller. Pat Perez, one of the original 11 players from the Saudi-backed circuit to bring the suit against the tour, has dropped out, Sports Illustrated reported on Saturday (AEST). He is the second player to have done so this week, with Carlos Ortiz also having moved on from the suit. Phil Mickelson and Bryson DeChambeau, meanwhile, are still part of the lawsuit, which has a trial date of January 2024.
Perez, 46, is a three-time winner on the PGA Tour and bolted for LIV in June. He made his debut in the circuit’s second tournament, outside Portland, Ore., and told SI on Friday that he joined the lawsuit out of loyalty to the other players, all of whom, including Perez, has been suspended by the tour since joining LIV. “I have no ill feelings toward the PGA Tour or any of the players. I’m a LIV guy 100 percent. I’m going to play for them. But I don’t feel any need to go after the PGA Tour. They gave me a wonderful opportunity for 21 years. I’ve got nothing against them, no hard feelings toward anybody. I earned everything I got out there, don’t get me wrong. Perez inked a four-year deal with LIV in the neighborhood of $10 million guaranteed, according to sources. In two tournaments thus far, he has earned just over $1.8 million, with $1.5 million of that coming via twice being on the winning team. Earlier this month, a federal judge denied a motion sought by three players who are part of the larger antitrust lawsuit — Talor Gooch, Hudson Swafford, and Matt Jones — to play in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup playoffs, which conclude next week. In related news, Greg Norman says Tiger Woods was never offered a $A1 billion sign-on fee to join LIV Golf, as has been widely reported. The LIV Golf chief cleared the air about reports the 15-time major winner was last year courted by the Saudi-backed tour with an astronomical cash offer.
#LIVGolf #Lawsuit #PGATour
Related Videos:
LIV Golf’s lawsuit against PGA Tour receives trial date | Golf Central | Golf Channel
youtube.com/watch?v=pK4Y5QOm8GM
PGA Tour responds to lawsuit from LIV Golf players | Golf Today | Golf Channel
youtube.com/watch?v=1eH0OB9NVNk
PGA Tour players react to LIV Golf players filing antitrust lawsuit | Golf Central | Golf Channel
youtube.com/watch?v=4gFBMCLpruA
The LIV Golf Tour is in HUGE Trouble from the PGA After This!
Welcome back to Sport Shock. Here’s some news for you about LIV’s lawsuit against PGA Tour. LIV Golf’s antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour is ongoing, but the field is getting smaller. Pat Perez, one of the original 11 players from the Saudi-backed circuit to bring the suit against the tour, has dropped out, Sports Illustrated reported on Saturday (AEST). He is the second player to have done so this week, with Carlos Ortiz also having moved on from the suit. Phil Mickelson and Bryson DeChambeau, meanwhile, are still part of the lawsuit, which has a trial date of January 2024.
Perez, 46, is a three-time winner on the PGA Tour and bolted for LIV in June. He made his debut in the circuit’s second tournament, outside Portland, Ore., and told SI on Friday that he joined the lawsuit out of loyalty to the other players, all of whom, including Perez, has been suspended by the tour since joining LIV. “I have no ill feelings toward the PGA Tour or any of the players. I’m a LIV guy 100 percent. I’m going to play for them. But I don’t feel any need to go after the PGA Tour. They gave me a wonderful opportunity for 21 years. I’ve got nothing against them, no hard feelings toward anybody. I earned everything I got out there, don’t get me wrong. Perez inked a four-year deal with LIV in the neighborhood of $10 million guaranteed, according to sources. In two tournaments thus far, he has earned just over $1.8 million, with $1.5 million of that coming via twice being on the winning team. Earlier this month, a federal judge denied a motion sought by three players who are part of the larger antitrust lawsuit — Talor Gooch, Hudson Swafford, and Matt Jones — to play in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup playoffs, which conclude next week. In related news, Greg Norman says Tiger Woods was never offered a $A1 billion sign-on fee to join LIV Golf, as has been widely reported. The LIV Golf chief cleared the air about reports the 15-time major winner was last year courted by the Saudi-backed tour with an astronomical cash offer.
#LIVGolf #Lawsuit #PGATour
Related Videos:
LIV Golf’s lawsuit against PGA Tour receives trial date | Golf Central | Golf Channel
youtube.com/watch?v=pK4Y5QOm8GM
PGA Tour responds to lawsuit from LIV Golf players | Golf Today | Golf Channel
youtube.com/watch?v=1eH0OB9NVNk
PGA Tour players react to LIV Golf players filing antitrust lawsuit | Golf Central | Golf Channel
youtube.com/watch?v=4gFBMCLpruA