Sports & Fitness

Saudi-backed Greg Norman not taking over Asian Tour, says circuit chief

New company not pledging US$200 mil to threaten US PGA Tour dominance of professional golf with speculated ‘super league’ launch

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 09 Nov 2021 6:00PM

Saudi-backed Greg Norman not taking over Asian Tour, says circuit chief
Newly-formed Saudi sovereign wealth fund-backed company, Liv Golf Investments − headed by former world number one golfer Greg Norman (pictured above in 2014) − will not be taking over the Asian Tour with a US$200 mil pledge to create ten new global tournaments over the next decade, Asian Tour commissioner and CEO Cho Minn Thant revealed today – AFP pic, November 9, 2021

HONG KONG − Greg Norman and his billionaire Saudi backers are not taking over the Asian Tour, insists the circuit’s chief, after the Australian great’s new company pledged US$200 mil (RM830.4 mil) to create ten new tournaments.

Nor is the former world number one launching a breakaway “super league” via his plunge into the Asian Tour that shook the golf world, tour commissioner and CEO Cho Minn Thant told AFP.

Greg revealed last month that he was the CEO of newly-formed LIV Golf Investments, a Saudi sovereign wealth fund-backed company committing US$200 mil to ten new global events on the Asian Tour schedule over the next decade.

Scant on detail, the announcement was interpreted by some as the first move in establishing Greg’s oft-touted “super league” that could split men’s professional golf and threaten the dominance of the US PGA Tour.

Such speculation is wide of the mark, Minn Thant said, while acknowledging that Greg has ambitions to create a superstar golf circuit separate to the main tours.

“I think there’s been a misconception that LIV Golf has taken over the Asian Tour and we are going to get the ‘LIV Golf Tour’ or the ‘Saudi Tour’, which is incorrect," said Minn Thant, speaking by video link from Jupiter, Florida, where two-time major winner Greg is based.

"They are a promoter who’s adding ten events to our tournament schedule. Our structure remains the same," assured Minn Thant, who is finalising details on a 25-event Asian Tour 2022 calendar.

It will begin with the US$5 mil (RM20.7 mil) Saudi International on February 3-6.

That is not part of the new Greg Norman-funded ten-event series but is expected to attract stars, such as Dustin Johnson, who won in 2019 and 2021 when the tournament was sanctioned by the European Tour.

The ten new events, likely to kick off in the Middle East and Europe, will join long-standing Asian tournaments, such as the Hong Kong Open and Maybank Championship in Malaysia.

To take part, players − such as Dustin − will need a release from the US PGA Tour, which a year ago formed a “strategic alliance” with the European Tour to counter the threat of any breakaway circuit.

“Obviously, before, they were almost assured of being released,” said Minn Thant. 

“But now, I guess, it’s a little bit harder... just because the PGA and European Tours may feel that we’re somewhat more competitive.”

Minn Thant’s focus now is on rekindling the Asian Tour, on hold since March 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic. 

The interrupted 2020-21 season resumes later this month after a 20-month absence with two US$1 mil (RM4.15 mil) tournaments in Thailand and will conclude with two more in Singapore in January, ahead of the new season launch in February.

Minn Thant revealed the new Greg Norman-backed events will be full-field with “70 to 80 Asian Tour members” with slots available to the top 200 in the world, plus others, including elite amateurs.

“To have ten tournaments with prize money above US$1 mil each has basically never before been seen on the Asian Tour,” said Minn Thant.

“It’s very likely to be the Asian Tour’s most lucrative season.”

The majority shareholder in LIV Golf Investments is the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds and behind the takeover of Premier League football club Newcastle United.

It has brought accusations of Saudi “sportswashing” of the Gulf kingdom’s human rights record.

“I think the political agenda is never going to be far from the conversation,” said Minn Thant. 

“We’re open to having the conversation. And our response is basically that we’re very fortunate that they are interested in golf and it’s good for the game of golf,” said Minn Thant, who noted that PIF has also invested in the likes of Uber. 

Minn Thant acknowledged that Greg and his Saudi backers harbour ambitions to start a “super league”, in which the game’s stars could compete for guaranteed payouts in individual and team events.

“Sure, it’s certainly one of their ambitions to start a league,” admitted Minn Thant.

“If the best players in the world decide that it’s something that they want to be part of, there’s no reason why the Asian Tour shouldn’t be part of it,” he said.

“But let’s face it, the PGA Tour is still the pinnacle tour that everyone wants to play, and it always will be.” – AFP, November 9, 2021

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