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![PGA Tour Pro Rory Mcilroy talks with Donald Trump Jr. During the pro-am at the Invitational Generations 2025.](https://golf.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/rory-mcilroy-donald-trump-jr.jpg)
Rory Mcilroy talks with Donald Trump Jr., the son of President Donald Trump, in Genesis 2025 invitation.
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PGA Tour believes there is an ally in President Donald Trump when it comes to their negotiations with Saudi Arabic public investment fund To reunite the pro -men golf.
A possible union was almost prohibited by the Department of Justice of the previous administration. PGA Tour hopes that the Trump administration will have a more favorable view of the agreement and that the president can help promote this process together.
Commissioner Jay Monahan and Adam Scott met Trump last week in Washington, DC, to discuss negotiations, and Tiger Woods played Golf with the president on Sunday.
Count Rory Mcilroy among those who believe Trump can be a useful tool in negotiations. The big winner four times played Golf with Trump before the inauguration and sees the president as an ally of PGA Tour.
“It was really good,” Mcilroy said of his meeting with Trump during his press conference in front of the tournament at the Invitational Genesis on Wednesday. “I thought we had a good discussion. I learned that he is not a fan of the Liv format. I was like but you have been waiting for their events. He was like, yes, but it doesn’t mean I like it. So I think he is on the tournament side. “
Mcilroy believes that Trump’s position and love for golf game will be useful as they seek to bring the best players together as soon as possible.
“So the president, he can do a lot of things,” Mcilroy said. “He has direct access to the Yasir chief (Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohamed bin Salman). Not many people have it. Not many people can say, I want you to make this agreement, and by the way, I I’m talking to your boss. I’m going to tell him the same thing.
“There are some things he can do. It can be influential. He loves golf game. “
From the practical point of view of the business, it makes sense that PGA Tour will be cozy to Trump, hoping that it can fat the slides and get their agreement through the finish line.
Trump has been waiting for numerous Liv events in his courses and used to host a PGA Tour event. He has a relationship with some of the golf stars and has had business relationships in Saudi Arabia since the creation of Liv.
Monahan characterized his meeting with the President as “productive”. He hopes to have more meetings in the future and believes that President Trump has the ability, desire and power to make things moving in the right direction.
‘Get on it’: Rory Mcilroy says PGA-Liv unification only works in 1 way
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“Well, number one, you see his passion for the game, his knowledge and understanding of the game,” Monahan told Trump on Wednesday. “He is very popular with PGA Tour. He is very familiar with the team in the public investment fund. Like us, he has a very clear view of what should happen, and he wants to help. The game means a lot to it. And he is the last dealer, so having it in the mix is ​​a great thing for the game. “
In his press availability Wednesday, Monahan hinted that PGA Tour and PIF are finally on the verge To reach somewhere, but was careful not to set a time limit on the reunion of the game.
“I don’t think you are sometimes close until you are over,” Monahan said. “When you look at all the parties involved, there is a general enthusiasm to do so.”
“If you think about what fans want, fans want reunion,” Monahan later said. “This is what we are concentrated. We have operated in a world where there are more than one (tour) and PGA Tour has performed very well. But in the long run, is this the best thing for fans? Is this the best thing about the game? We are trying to solve it, so everyone benefits. “
To resolve the civil conflict of golf, PGA Tour stars and energy brokers are returning to Trump.
At this point, it doesn’t matter how it is done. The game simply has to be collected.
“I think everyone should overcome it,” Mcilroy said. “We all have to say, okay, this is the starting point and we move forward. We don’t look after us, we don’t look at the past. We all come back together and move forward, this is the best thing for everyone. “
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Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for golf. com before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break the 90 and will never lose confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end. Josh can be reached in josh.schrock@golf.com.