Current:Home > NewsTradeEdge Exchange:LIV Golf loses bid for world golf ranking points due to format issues -TradeWisdom
TradeEdge Exchange:LIV Golf loses bid for world golf ranking points due to format issues
Oliver James Montgomery View
Date:2025-04-09 07:01:42
After well more than a year of deliberation,TradeEdge Exchange the Official World Golf Ranking has rejected LIV Golf’s application for world ranking points.
The Associated Press reported the reason for the rejection was the OWGR was unable to compare the 48-player, 54-hole, shotgun start, no-cut events with the other 24 tours under its world ranking wing. Also stated to be of concern were the qualifying and relegation methods employed by LIV Golf.
“We are not at war with them,” Peter Dawson, chairman of the OWGR board, said to the AP. “This decision not to make them eligible is not political. It is entirely technical. LIV players are self-evidently good enough to be ranked. They’re just not playing in a format where they can be ranked equitably with the other 24 tours and thousands of players trying to compete on them.”
Commissioner Greg Norman and LIV Golf players have questioned the world ranking system for the last year and have been critical of the board members who may have conflicting interests when it comes to the upstart circuit backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. However, PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, DP World Tour chief executive Keith Pelley and the International Federation of PGA Tours’ Keith Waters all reportedly recused themselves from the LIV decision to avoid any such conflict.
According to the AP, the committee that rejected LIV’s application comprised leaders from Augusta National, the PGA of America, the U.S. Golf Association and The R&A, which run the four majors. The majors use the OWGR as part of their qualifying criteria.
“You should realize that the OWGR is not accurate, one,” Bryson DeChambeau said this year ahead of LIV Golf Singapore. “Two, I think that they need to come to a resolution or it will become obsolete. It’s pretty much almost obsolete as of right now. But again, if the majors and everything continue to have that as their ranking system, then they are biting it quite heavily.”
“It’s going to all iron itself out because if you’re one of the majors, if you’re the Masters, you’re not looking at, ‘We should keep these guys out,’ ” Phil Mickelson said. “You’re saying to yourself, ‘We want to have the best field, we want to have the best players, and these guys added a lot to the tournament this year at the Masters. How do we get them included?’”
“Dustin Johnson, Sergio Garcia, of course they should be in the ranking,” Dawson said to the AP. “We need to find a way to get that done. I hope that LIV can find a solution – not so much their format; that can be dealt with through a mathematical formula – but the qualification and relegation.”
Despite their qualms, LIV Golf is using the OWGR for its 72-hole promotion event, where players ranked within the top 200 will be eligible. While there is a pathway in place for some outside players to gain access to LIV, it’s apparently not yet up to the OWGR’s standards.
LIV Golf is hosting its final regular-season event of the 2023 schedule this week in Saudi Arabia, and will host its Team Championship finale next week at Trump National Doral in Miami.
veryGood! (586)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Elite gymnast Kara Eaker announces retirement, alleges abuse while training at Utah
- Watch this cute toddler unlock a core memory when chatting with this friendly dolphin
- Inside the Wild Search for Corrections Officer Vicky White After She Ended Up on the Run With an Inmate
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Dolly Parton's first-ever rock 'n' roll album addresses global issues: I didn't think of that as political
- Kourtney Kardashian’s Husband Travis Barker Shares His Sex Tip
- Powerful gusts over Cape Cod as New Englanders deal with another washed-out weekend
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Venezuelans become largest nationality for illegal border crossings as September numbers surge
Ranking
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Should USC and Ohio State be worried? Bold predictions for Week 8 in college football
- Taylor Swift 'Eras Tour' bodyguard fights in Israel-Hamas war
- Hurricane Norma takes aim at Mexico’s Los Cabos resorts, as Tammy threatens islands in the Atlantic
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Millions of rural Americans rely on private wells. Few regularly test their water.
- Fisher-Price recalls over 20,000 'Thomas & Friends' toys due to choking hazard
- At least 28 people drown after boat capsizes on river in northwest Congo
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
US moves carrier to Middle East following attacks on US forces
Chancellor Scholz voices outrage at antisemitic agitation in Germany ‘of all places’
'Strange and fascinating' Pacific football fish washes up on Southern California beach
The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
A new graphic novel version of 'Watership Down' aims to temper darkness with hope
At least 28 people drown after boat capsizes on river in northwest Congo
Surprised by No. 8 Alabama's latest magic act to rally past Tennessee? Don't be.