Kevin Cunningham
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Adam Scott and Tiger Woods are closely involved in PGA Tour-Pif negotiations.
Andy Lyons/Getty Images
Adam Scott described the possible reunion of PGA Tour and GolfWhere Liv Pro would return to play in tourist events as “a road ahead”. Rory Mcilroy, on the other hand, argued last week that reunion was “the best thing for everyone”.
Whatever way you see, the reunion would bring a big problem with it. Many players who joined Liv, especially in the early years, did so for large sums of money paid forward.
Many other players chose to reject the generous offers of Liv in part because PGA Tour declared war on anyone who joined the Upsart League, banning them from tournaments. The decision was simple: money now against a future in PGA Tour.
But if the reunion happens, those who got the money and went to Liv will seem to get them all. And that could leave those players who remained loyal to the creepy tournament.
Scott’s thoughts on reunion
As chairman of the PGA Tour’s advisory council and a player director, Scott understands the situation better than the majority. And while said mcilroy Anyone angry about the reunion must “overcome it”, Instead of scott expressed empathy in recent comments about Associate press.
“I wouldn’t be surprised – or I would not judge anyone, members – if the reunion would happen and they were not happy with the way it happened,” Scott told Apea. “I wouldn’t hold it against anyone if there were negative emotions attached to it. The players’ opinion would come back.”
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Seduce
He went on, “There are no easy answers to any of these things. Everyone has the right to feel something about what happened.”
At the same time, Scott defended the negotiations, and any hypothetical agreement for which players directors agree, arguing that the task they face is difficult, and they are not “in control of the whole situation. There is another side of history. ”
In other words, any final agreement will be a compromise, so PGA Tour members will not receive everything they want. Whatever the way to go, Scott will support the decision and decision makers on the tournament, for which he argued that they are trying to get the best possible agreement for tour members.
“The only thing I know is that we will not all enjoy, but everyone should know that I will be behind these players directors. They are trying to do the best thing for all membership,” said Scott Apea. “They have faced some difficult decisions for the past two years – difficult calls, major consequences – for whatever we vote for.”
Tiger Woods Talks PGA Tour-Liv Deal
Tiger Woods did not make his expected return to the PGA Tour’s action on the Invitational Genesis as he treated his mother’s last lossTime.
But Woods joined CBS Broadcasting Cabin Sunday, where he shared his own thoughts in PGA Tour-Pif negotiations and a possible reunion.
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Nick pastowski
“I think we’re in a very positive place now. We had a meeting with the president. Unfortunately, I had some other circumstances that came out, but Jay (Monahan) and Adam (Scott), they did excellent during the meeting, and we We have another subsequent meeting. “
Woods went on, “I think things will recover quickly. We’ll make this game go in the right direction. It’s going in the wrong direction for a few years and fans want us all to play together, all the best players playing together and we will make it happen. “
And, according to Tiger, fans may not have to wait long for an agreement to finally end. When asked if an agreement could be made “this year” or even “very quickly this year”, Woods had a simple answer.
“Yes and yes.”
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Kevin Cunningham
Golfit.com editor
As a managing manufacturer for Golf.com, Cunningham edits, writes and publishes stories on Golf.com, and administers brand electronic newspapers, which reach more than 1.4 million subscribers each month. A former practical twice, it also helps keep Golf.com out of news stories and service content provided by our reporters and writers, and works with the technology team to develop new products and innovative ways to offer a page commitment to our audience.