
After two years at a stalemate, the golf tournament wars have undergone a tactical change.
For the first time since the infamous “unification” agreement of June 2023, both sides seem resigned to a new reality: Peace is not on the table.
The latest evidence arrived on Wednesday, when the PGA Tour’s two main stakeholders spoke in two very different corners of the golf world – Rory McIlroy in Dubai and Adam Scott in La Quinta, California. Although the two stars (and the PGA Tour’s leading political voices) were separated by more than 8,000 miles, they offered the same hope for restoring peace to LIV.
McIlroy was the first to address the murky state of affairs with LIV and the league’s financiers at the Saudi Public Investment Fund. Speaking from the dais at the Dubai Desert Classic on Wednesday morning, he said that while the reunion was easier the way to bring the best golfers together was also the most unlikely.
“Well, it does matter – I think it does,” McIlroy said of the reunion prospect. “I would say that’s Solution A. It matters, but I just don’t see a world where it can happen at this point.”
Almost 12 hours later, from the American Express line in California, Scott shared a similar sentiment.
“It seems like they’re worlds apart,” Scott told Todd Lewis of the Golf Channel. “They operate very differently from a starting point. There’s a contract to play one, (not) the other. I’d say they’re incompatible at the moment and they have been. There’s been talk for years about that. And that’s fine, I think people are used to each organization doing their own business now.”
It should be noted that pessimism is not the same as confirmation. The LIV era has taught us that prerogatives and incentives can change quickly—and with little warning. But both players have been key figures on the Tour side over the past few years and remain connected to events on the PGA Tour side of the ledger.
Scott, who serves on the Tour’s policy board, was one of a handful of participants in a key Oval Office meeting with representatives from both tours and President Trump that appears to have pushed the two sides further from a deal.
He has also has been a central part of several iterations of Tour changes aimed at strengthening its position in the LIV era. The last round of these changes – a new “returning member program” intended to provide a temporary path back to the PGA Tour for four of LIV’s biggest stars — has already yielded a breakthrough. The five-time major champion Brooks Koepka will return to the Tour at next week’s Farmers Insurance Open, the first LIV star to return after defecting.
“I’m excited to see Brooks come back and play,” Scott said. “He’s a five-time major champion. It’s going to be great to see him play Torrey again in a tournament. Who would have thought it a few years ago? I don’t think anyone would have thought it would have happened.”
Koepka’s return was a pivot for the PGA Tour. For the first time, the Tour showed a willingness to bend its rules around suspensions and fines for LIV’s true needle movers. He also suggested that the Tour’s current strategy for the reunion is actually pretty simple: Wait for the big fish and, once you land them, let the rest take care of themselves.
Of course, this is assuming the big fish they want to return to the PGA Tour. That’s the tournament hope, but it’s still anyone’s guess, especially with stars like Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau is still under contract with LIV.
The Tour has been accused of relying on hope as a strategy in the LIV era. In many ways, it was the animating thesis of the June 6 deal and again with the “returning member program.”
But instead of a negotiating partner, hope might not be the worst strategy for the tournament in 2026. At the very least, it seems much more feasible than peace.
“I don’t see a world where two or three sides or whoever it is is going to deliver enough,” McIlroy said. “For the reunion to happen, each side is going to feel like they’ve lost, where you really want each side to feel like they’ve won. I think they’re just too far apart for that to happen.”

