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NY Post
New York Post
14 Jun 2023


NextImg:PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan ‘recuperating from a medical situation’

LOS ANGELES — A difficult time for Jay Monahan got ominously more complicated Tuesday.

The PGA Tour commissioner has been in the throes of a stressful couple of years with his battle against LIV Golf, which took a stunning turn last week when the tour joined with the Saudi-backed tour in a yet-to-be-determined alliance.

Tuesday, he informed the PGA Tour Policy Board that he’s “recuperating from a medical situation.’’

The PGA Tour issued this release on Tuesday night: “The Board fully supports Jay and appreciates everyone respecting his privacy.

“During Jay’s absence, Ron Price, Chief Operating Officer, and Tyler Dennis, Executive Vice President & President, PGA Tour, will lead the day-to-day operations of the PGA Tour with the assistance of the great team Jay has built, ensuring seamless continuity. We will provide further updates as appropriate.’’

This comes as Monahan, who’s been on the back foot since LIV Golf pushed its way into men’s professional golf and he saw it as a threat to his tour, sent a letter to members of Congress and called them out for lack of support against the Saudi entity.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan was dealing with a “medical situation.”
USA TODAY Sports

In the letter he sent last week, which was obtained by Politico, he partially blamed Congress for the surprising agreement with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund the PGA Tour made last week, claiming that the tour was left “on our own’’ in its fight against the rival Saudi tour and league that’s funded by the PIF.

The letter was dated June 9, three days after the announcement about a “framework agreement’’ made about the new alliance between the PGA Tour and LIV.

The new entity that came out of the alliance, which for now is being called “NewCo,’’ has Monahan as CEO with Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the governor of the PIF, the chairman of the board.

“Over the past two years, the PGA Tour has fought an intense and highly publicized battle as the Saudi Arabian PIF-backed LIV golf league attempted to ‘buy’ PGA Tour players and take over the game of golf in the United States and beyond, creating a fractured golf ecosystem and fomenting a heated divisiveness into the game,’’ Monahan wrote.

“We believe that we did everything we could possibly do to defend what we stand for, including spending tens of millions of dollars to defend ourselves from litigation instigated by LIV Golf — significant funds diverted away from our core mission to benefit our players and generate charity.’’

Monahan said he met with several members of Congress to discuss LIV’s entry into golf in the US and suggested ways that lawmakers could support the PGA Tour in its battle.

Those suggestions, Monahan intimated, were not taken by Congress.

PGA Tour and LIV Golf are ending a war — by joining forces.

The two golf leagues, along with the European DP World Tour, are merging into one company after a period of fierce rivalry, one where LIV Golf defectors were banned from competing on the Tour.

LIV, financed by the Saudi Public Investment Fund and led by legendary golfer Greg Norman, lured some of the top names in golf last year with reported nine-figure contracts, including Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau.

Other huge golf names, however, like Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy, stayed loyal to the Tour, despite being offered a massive amount of money.


Follow The Post’s coverage of the PGA Tour-LIV Golf merger


Norman said last year Woods turned down a payday in the range of $700 million-$800 million to stick with the PGA Tour.

With the merger, the Saudi-backed LIV and the Tour are ending an antitrust battle and agreed to end all litigation between the two sides.

“After two years of disruption and distraction, this is a historic day for the game we all know and love,” PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said in a statement. “This transformational partnership recognizes the immeasurable strength of the PGA TOUR’s history, legacy and pro-competitive model.”

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“While we are grateful for the written declarations of support we received from certain members, we were largely left on our own to fend off the attacks, ostensibly due to the United States’ complex geopolitical alliance with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,’’ Monahan wrote.

“This left the very real prospect of another decade of expensive and distracting litigation and the PGA Tour’s long-term existence under threat.”

Last week, members of Congress began a move to draft legislation that would look into ending the PGA Tour’s non-profit status.

The PGA Tour has been operating as a member organization 501c(6). On Monday, the Senate announced its own investigation.

Jay Monahan

Jay Monahan, in a letter, partially blamed Congress for the merger with LIV Golf.
Getty Images

On Monday, the PGA Tour received a letter from the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations asking for records and communications between the tour and the PIF.

In Monahan’s letter, he explained that the PIF will be a minority investor in the new commercial entity, with the PGA Tour retaining majority equity.

He pointed out the PIF is investing in the tour similarly to its investments in other “U.S.-based companies.”

“Rather than a foreign-funded entity taking over an American sport, the end result is that the PIF has agreed to work within the existing golf ecosystem as a minority investor with the PGA Tour in full control,” Monahan wrote.

“The PGA Tour is, and will remain, an American institution dedicated to its players and generating charity in the communities where we play.”