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Will LIV players come back to the PGA Tour? Nobody knows, though some say paths should exist

LIV won't look anything like it does now if it survives past 2026: Chamblee
Golf Channel's Damon Hack and Brandel Chamblee react to Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund statement addressing the future of LIV Golf and its funding.

DORAL, Fla. — Jordan Spieth is like everyone else in golf right now. When trying to figure out if LIV golfers who left the PGA Tour will try to return, he doesn’t mind saying he has no idea.

Nobody does.

“I think there’s just too many unknowns for me to have a good gauge on what would happen,” Spieth said after his opening round at the Cadillac Championship Thursday.

The announcement that Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund will stop funding LIV Golf after this year means some of the biggest names in the sport — Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and Cameron Smith among them — may aim to return to the PGA Tour at some point, much in the same way that Brooks Koepka has and Patrick Reed likely will.

It was, as would be expected, a major talking point at the Cadillac Championship on Thursday.

“If there’s a system for Brooks and a system for Patrick Reed, does that stay the same for guys in the same category as those two coming back or does it change now? Does it change for guys who sued and dropped their membership?” Spieth asked.

DeChambeau, for example, was among players who filed an antitrust lawsuit against the PGA Tour in August 2022. That lawsuit, along with a countersuit by the PGA Tour, was dismissed a year later.

“There’s just a lot of different things that happened over the last four years for that,” Spieth said. “I’m kind of glad I’m not in that room, and I trust the guys that are in that room to make the right decision.”

Jordan Spieth was bogey-free with a trio of birdies and an eagle on his front nine at Doral’s Blue Monster. He hit a snag on No. 12 but rallied to finish 7-under 65 on the round.

One of the guys who will be in the room — but isn’t yet — is newly-elected Player Advisory Council chairman Lucas Glover, who begins his four-year term on the board in January. It’s possible that by then, whatever needs to be decided will be an afterthought.

“I will never begrudge anybody for making a decision for the betterment of their career, their life, whatever that may be,” Glover said. “But do I think they should abide by the pathways back and pay the same penalties that the previous people have paid, absolutely.”

Koepka’s return, for example, came with stipulations including a $5 million donation to various charities that he and the tour selected, no access to PGA Tour equity shares for five years and no FedEx Cup bonus money he might earn this year.

Brooks Koepka again found himself playing the waiting game as the first alternate at the PGA Tour’s signature event in Miami Thursday.

“There’s always been pathways back with penalty, so yeah, sure, it can be done, as we have seen,” Glover said. “It’s already happened a couple times. I’m sure the tour is working diligently to figure all that out. I’m not privy to those phone calls.”

Brian Harman said he’s still operating under the belief that golf fans want to see the best players competing in one place.

“Time heals all wounds,” Harman said. “There’s still some sentiment out here, especially with all the lawsuit stuff, that stuff’s going to be tough to get past. We play with all those guys in the majors, so I think there should be a path back.”

LIV can't exist the way it has over last five year year: Lynch
Golf Channel's Damon Hack and Eamon Lynch react to news that LIV Golf officially plans to tell staff and players about a loss of funding from Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund.