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Jun 15, 2024; Pinehurst, North Carolina, USA; Rory McIlroy hits from the second tee box during the third round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Katie Goodale-USA TODAY Sports Field Level Media’s Golf Glance provides weekly news and storylines from each of the major North American golf tours. PGA TOUR LAST TOURNAMENT: John Deere Classic (Davis Thompson) THIS WEEK: Genesis Scottish Open, North Berwick, Scotland, July 11-14 Course: The Renaissance Club (Par 70, 7,237 Yards) Purse: $9M (Winner: $1.62M) Defending Champion: Rory McIlroy FedEx Cup Leader: Scottie Scheffler HOW TO FOLLOW TV: Thursday-Friday: 10:30-11 a.m. (Golf Channel – world feed), 11 a.m.-2 p.m. (GC); Saturday-Sunday: 10 a.m.-12 p.m. (GC), 12-3 p.m. (CBS) Streaming (ESPN+): Thursday-Friday, 2 a.m.-2 p.m. ET; Saturday-Sunday, 4:15 a.m.-3 p.m. X: @ScottishOpen NOTES: The PGA Tour is co-sanctioning the event for the third consecutive year, with the field including 75 tour players along with a similar number of DP World Tour players. … It is the final event of The Open Qualifying Series, with three spots available into next week’s field at Royal Troon. The top three players who make the cut and are not otherwise exempt will earn spots into The Open. … McIlroy defends his title as he tees it up for the first time since losing the lead on the back nine of the U.S. Open to finish second. No one has successfully defended at the Scottish Open. … Thirty-five players in the field competed at last week’s John Deere Classic. … Cole Rueck will make his PGA Tour debut after recently finishing his sophomore year at Boise State. He earned a sponsor exemption by winning the Genesis Collegiate Showcase at The Riviera Country Club in February. … Thompson is coming off his tournament-record 28-under par 256 at TPC Deere Run to earn his first spot in the Scottish Open. He has three consecutive top-10 finishes. BEST BETS: Rory McIlroy (+800 at DraftKings) hasn’t played since the U.S. Open, but does have a win among three top-5s while posting top-15 finishes in five consecutive starts. … Xander Schauffele (+900) won the Scottish Open two years ago, his last tournament victory until claiming the PGA Championship this year. His 11 top-10 finishes on tour this year are five more than any other player in the field. … Ludvig Aberg (+1600). … Collin Morikawa (+1600). … Tommy Fleetwood (+2000) and Tom Kim (+2500) are the only players to post top-10 finishes in the event each of the past two years. … Viktor Hovland (+2200). … Robert MacIntyre (+4000) finished second last year and the Scotland native won his maiden PGA Tour event at the RBC Canadian Open last month. PGA TOUR THIS WEEK: ISCO Championship, Nicholasville, Ky., July 11-14 Course: Champions at Keene Trace Golf Club (Par 72, 7,328 Yards) Purse: $4M (Winner: $720,000) Defending Champion: Vincent Norrman HOW TO FOLLOW TV: Thursday-Friday: 4:30-7:30 p.m. (Golf Channel); Saturday-Sunday: 4-7 p.m. (GC) X: @ISCOChamp NOTES: Florida State junior Luke Clanton is in the field after becoming the first amateur on record since 1958 to post consecutive top-10 finishes on the PGA Tour. He is also the +900 pre-tournament favorite at DraftKings ahead of Michael Thorbjornsen at +1400. … The 150-player field includes 50 players from the DP World Tour as part of the Strategic Alliance between the tours. The winner will receive a PGA Tour exemption through 2026 for current tour members and through 2025 for non-tour members, along with a DP World Tour exemption through 2026. … The field also includes 42 players who have previously won on the PGA Tour. … Sponsor exemption Neal Shipley was the low amateur at this year’s Masters and U.S. Open. NEXT TOURNAMENT: The Open Championship, Troon, South Ayrshire, Scotland, July 18-21 LPGA Tour LAST TOURNAMENT: Dow Championship (Atthaya Thitikul, Ruoning Yin) THIS WEEK: Evian Championship, Evian-les-Bains, France, July 11-14 Course: Evian Resort Golf Club, Champions Course (Par 71, 6,693 yards) Purse: $8M (Winners: $1.2) Defending Champion: Celine Boutier Race to the CME Globe leader: Nelly Korda HOW TO FOLLOW TV: Thursday-Friday: 6-10:30 a.m. ET (Golf Channel/Peacock), 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m. (Peacock); Saturday-Sunday, 4-10 a.m. (GC/Peacock) X: @EvianChamp NOTES: This is the 11th edition of the event since it was elevated to a major in 2013 and serves as the fourth of five majors this year. … The 132-player field will be cut to the top 65 and ties after 36 holes. … Korda returns after missing her title defense at last week’s Ladies European Tour at Centurion Club due to a dog bite. Korda won six of her first eight starts this season, but has now missed three consecutive cuts for the first time in her career. … Boutier cruised to a six-shot victory over Brooke Henderson last year to become the first Frenchwoman to win the Evian. … The Champions Course opened in 1904 alongside the Hotel Royal. Originally a nine-hole course, it was re-designed in the late 1980s. … Forty-one players in this week’s field will compete in the Paris Olympics next month. NEXT TOURNAMENT: Dana Open, Sylvania, Ohio, July 18-21 PGA Tour Champions LAST TOURNAMENT: 44th U.S. Senior Open Championship (Richard Bland) THIS WEEK: Kaulig Companies Championship, Akron, Ohio, July 11-14 Course: Firestone Country Club (Par 70, 7,248 yards) Purse: $3.5M (Winner: $525,000) Defending Champion: Steve Stricker Charles Schwab Cup leader: Stephen Ames HOW TO FOLLOW TV: Thursday-Friday, 2-4:30 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); Saturday-Sunday, 12-4 p.m. (GC) X: @KauligChamp NOTES: This is the fourth of five majors on the Champions tour this season. … The 78-player field includes Stricker along with Wisconsin native Jerry Kelly. Both are seeking to become just the second player to win the event three times. … The field also includes five World Golf Hall of Fame members: Ernie Els, Retief Goosen, Vijah Singh Colin Montgomerie and Jose Maria Olazabal. NEXT TOURNAMENT: The Senior Open Championship, Carnoustie, Scotland, July 25-28 LIV Golf League LAST TOURNAMENT: Nashville (Individual: Tyrrell Hatton; Team: Legion XIII) THIS WEEK: Andalucia, Spain, July 12-14 Course: Real Club Valderrama (Par 71, 7,010 Yards) Purse: $20M Individual, $5M Team (Winner: $4M Individual, $3M Team) Defending Champion: Talor Gooch (Individual), Torque GC (Team) 2024 Leaders: Players, Joaquin Niemann; Team, Crushers GC HOW TO FOLLOW TV: Friday, 7:15 a.m. ET (CW App, LIV Golf Plus); Saturday, 7:15 a.m. (CW Network, CW App, LIV Golf Plus); Sunday, 7:05 a.m. (CW Network, CW App, LIV Golf Plus) X: @livgolf_league NOTES: This is the 10th of 14 events on the 2024 schedule, which will be followed by the team championship in Dallas Sept. 20-22. … The 54-player field will compete in a three-day event with shotgun starts. There are 12 four-player teams and two independent wild card players. … Hatton is coming off his first LIV Golf individual title at Nashville. His Legion XIII team will make its debut in Andalucia captained by Spanish star Jon Rahm. … Fireballs GC captain Sergio Garcia was born in Borriol, Castellon, and is an honorary member at Valderrama, which his calls his favorite golf course in the world. … Sixteen players in the field are scheduled to play in next week’s Open Championship at Royal Troon. NEXT TOURNAMENT: LIV Golf UK, United Kingdom, July 26-28 –Field Level Media

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Get ready for early morning golf! The PGA Tour is heading to Scotland for two weeks. First up is the Genesis Scottish Open, and while most of the United States witnessed record heat, the boys of summer are about to break out their sweaters in North Berwick, Scotland. Our host venue, The Renaissance Club, rests alongside the Firth of Forth, a fancy name for a body of water that will create havoc across the course when the wind (or weather) rolls in.

Aside from updating your favorite weather app, it’s time to check the Monday Odds Board. Rory McIlroy returns for the first time since his elite exit from the U.S. Open. About a month has passed, and you better believe there will be questions in Scotland. Not just about Pinehurst, but about his game with all of the time off. Will it be sharp enough to defend his title at +750? Will having to answer to the media after his fast exit post-U.S. Open be too much to handle? Chris Powers from Golf Digest seems to think so. I agree with him and lack to see the value in a 22-1 Tommy Fleetwood as well.

Watch the below video for our favorite bets and players we’re fading for the 2024 John Deere Classic:

Tommy truthers will say he has two top 10s—a sixth- and a fourth-place finish in the past two years. My retort, Fleetwood has 32 top 10s on the PGA Tour! Maybe Tommy can win this week, but in a field this strong that number feels very low. Conversely, Aaron Rai has been playing excellent golf. Coming off four straight top 20s, Rai returns to the Renaissance Club where he won the Scottish Open in 2020. It was only a DP World Tour event then, but nonetheless he has a very positive course history.

One major reason for Rai’s resurgence has been his putting. Now working with PGA professional John Graham, Aaron gained nine strokes at the John Deere Classic on the greens. Combined with his excellent ball-striking, Aaron is now a much more complete player. I’m grabbing Aaron Rai today while he still sits above 50-1. Once the week settles in that number will drop based upon his recent form and course history.

Watch the weekly Odds Drop video for Golf Digest experts Chris Powers and Steve Hennessey’s best value picks. Steve and I had Davis Thompson this past weekend, and Powers has been picking plenty of “major” winners. Chris predicted Xander at Valhalla and Bryson at Pinehurst. Needless to say, the Monday Odds Drop crew is nearly as hot as the summer heat.

Looking for insider golf betting knowledge? Subscribe to Read The Line for Stewart’s weekly picks.

Keith Stewart is a five-time award-winning PGA professional, a betting contributor and content partner with Golf Digest and founder of Read The Line, the premier on-site live golf betting insights service covering the LPGA and PGA Tour. Subscribe to Read The Line’s weekly newsletter here and raise your golf betting acumen. Keith’s winning content can also be found on SportsGrid, Bleacher Report and The Sporting News. Follow him on Twitter @readtheline_.

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Rory McIlroy may have an Open Championship title to his name, but his relationship with the game’s oldest Major has witnessed a few ups and downs.There was a time when the Northern Irishman struggled to adapt his game to the demands of links golf. That’s no longer the case, and his Open record (one win and six other top-10 finishes from 14 appearances) is very impressive.(Image credit: Getty Images)McIlroy made his Open debut at Carnoustie in 2007 where he finished Low Amateur, and recorded his first top-10 finish three years later at St Andrews, where he opened the week with a spectacular 63.However, as gifted a player as he was when he burst onto the scene, it took McIlroy a while to shape his game for the links challenge and really fall in love with The Open. After missing the cut at Muirfield in 2013, McIlroy bounced back in style the following year at Royal Liverpool to become Champion Golfer of the Year.McIlroy’s saw his six-shot overnight lead trimmed on Sunday, but he held his nerve with a 71 to hold off Rickie Fowler and Sergio Garcia.(Image credit: Getty Images)The four-time Major winner has been banging on the door pretty much ever since, although he was unable to defend his title at St Andrews in 2015 after injuring his ankle ligaments playing soccer.Subscribe to the Golf Monthly newsletter to stay up to date with all the latest tour news, equipment news, reviews, head-to-heads and buyer’s guides from our team of experienced experts.In all, he has finished top-5 on six occasions (including his 2014 victory), and has suffered just two missed cuts (2013 and 2019).Perhaps his biggest disappointment, other than missing his title defence, was the missed cut that came in his homeland at Royal Portrush in 2019, where he opened with a 79 before making a valiant effort to make the weekend with a second-round 65.Here’s a closer look at how McIlroy has fared at The Open since making his first appearance in 2007.(Image credit: Getty Images)Swipe to scroll horizontallyMcIlroy’s Finishing Position By Year2023, Royal LiverpoolT6Row 0 – Cell 2 2022, St Andrews 3Row 1 – Cell 2 2021, Royal St George’s T46Row 2 – Cell 2 2020CANCELLED (Covid)Row 3 – Cell 2 2019, Royal PortrushMCRow 4 – Cell 2 2018, CarnoustieT2Row 5 – Cell 2 2017, Royal BirkdaleT4Row 6 – Cell 2 2016, Royal TroonT5Row 7 – Cell 2 2015, St Andrews DNPRow 8 – Cell 2 2014, Royal Liverpool1Row 9 – Cell 2 2013, MuirfieldMCRow 10 – Cell 2 2012, Royal Lytham & St AnnesT60Row 11 – Cell 2 2011, Royal St George’sT25Row 12 – Cell 2 2010, St AndrewsT3Row 13 – Cell 2 2009, TurnberryT47Row 14 – Cell 2 2008, Royal Birkdale DNPRow 15 – Cell 2 2007, Carnoustie 42Row 16 – Cell 2

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Rory McIlroy opted to take a three-week break from competing after his heartbreaking near-miss at the US Open, but he will return to defend his Scottish Open title this week

Rory McIlroy is returning to action(Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Rory McIlroy’s attention will turn back to competing this week as he defends his Scottish Open title, but he will have to do so against some of the best players in the world ahead of next week’s Open Championship.

McIlroy has been absent from the PGA Tour across the last three events, after the Northern Irishman’s heartbreaking loss at last month’s US Open. McIlroy was on the cusp of becoming a major champion for the first time in 10 years at Pinehurst No. 2, holding a two-shot lead with five holes to play in the US Open.

He went on to play his final four holes in three-over-par though, ensuring he missed out in agonising fashion as his LIV Golf rival Bryson DeChambeau prevailed in North Carolina by a single shot.

READ MORE: DP World Tour winner who caught Bryson DeChambeau’s eye moves step closer to LIV Golf move
READ MORE: PGA Tour star who made misconstrued Rory McIlroy comment is making career switch

Shattered by his near-miss, McIlroy skipped his post-tournament media duties and made a sharp exit from the Pinehurst site just minutes after DeChambeau’s win was confirmed. A day later he finally broke his silence, announcing he would be taking a break until the trip to the Scottish Open.

Having congratulated DeChambeau on his victory, McIlroy went on to write in a statement: “I feel closer to winning my next major championship than I ever have. The one word that I would describe my career as is resilient. I’ve shown my resilience over and over again in the last 17 years and I will again.

“I’m going to take a few weeks away from the game to process everything and build myself back up for my defence of the Genesis Scottish Open and The Open at Royal Troon. See you in Scotland.” Almost a month on, the trip to Scotland is finally here as he returns to The Renaissance Club to defend the title he won a year earlier.

For all the latest on news, politics, sports, and showbiz from the USA, go to The Mirror US .

Rory McIlroy won the Scottish Open in 2023(Keyur Khamar/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

McIlroy was crowned the champion of Scotland in dramatic fashion, pipping his Ryder Cup teammate Robert MacIntyre on the final hole after firing in a superb 2-iron from 205 yards before rolling in the putt from 11-feet. His title defence will come against a strong field though, with the world’s best players looking to get in some much-needed links golf preparation before The Open at Royal Troon a week later.
The man who won the title a year prior to McIlroy in Xander Schauffele will return to Scotland for this week’s event. Schauffele got his hands on the title at The Renaissance after seeing off fellow American Kurt Kitayama by a single shot. This time around, he heads into the tournament as one of the most in-form players on the planet, becoming a major champion for the first time after winning the PGA Championship in May.

McIlroy will also have to deal with the ever-growing talent of Ludvig Aberg, whose remarkable rise over the past 12 months sees him sit one spot behind Schauffele in the world rankings in fourth. Another major champion teeing it up in North Berwick is Wyndham Clark. The former US Open champion is one of four players inside the top-five competing alongside McIlroy, Schauffele and Aberg.
His Ryder Cup teammate and world No. 6 Collin Morikawa will also be in action. The American knows exactly what it takes to take on the links golf challenge, having been crowned Open champion at Royal St. George’s back in 2021. He will be looking to find a similar performance in North Berwick to set him perfectly for Open victory No. 2 at Royal Troon.
Continuing the top-10 trend, world No. 7 Viktor Hovland is one of the other star-studded names in the field. Whilst he has not played his best golf so far in 2024, he will be looking to kick-start his season at the perfect time during the Scottish swing. Hovland will be joined by fellow European Tommy Fleetwood too, who has a strong record at the Scottish Open, having finished tied-fourth and tied-sixth in the last two editions.

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Jon Rahm has hit out at an American pundit for his comments on Rory McIlroy’s final putt at the US Open last month as the Northern Irishman missed out on a fifth major

Jon Rahm leapt to the defense of Rory McIlroy((Image: Getty))

Jon Rahm didn’t hold back when he criticized commentator Smylie Kaufman’s take on Rory McIlroy’s crucial putt during the final hole of last month’s US Open.
McIlroy, who was in hot pursuit of his fifth major title, a victory that has eluded him for a decade, missed a par putt on Pinehurst’s 18th, finishing just one stroke behind winner Bryson DeChambeau.

McIlroy had been leading by two shots with only five holes to go, but as he lined up what would become his second-to-last shot of the tournament, Kaufman advised viewers on the broadcast: “You just got to hammer it. And it needs to hit the back of the hole, go up and then go down. Not outside the hole. It’s a left-centre putt, but you can make it if you start it right in the middle, too.”
READ MORE: Jon Rahm brutally branded ‘irrelevant’ as LIV Golf slump tipped to continue at The Open

READ MORE: Rory McIlroy’s LIV Golf fears proven right in worrying prospect for PGA Tour

Rahm, sidelined from the US Open due to a foot injury, felt those comments drastically underestimated the difficulty of McIlroy’s putt.

The Spanish golfer later expressed his frustration, saying: “I thought from the times I had it on [the television] and I could hear, I thought [the broadcast] was okay.

“One of the things that absolutely burned me, and I think it was Smylie who said it, he severely underplayed how difficult Rory’s putt on 18 was. When he said it’s a left-centre putt, if you hit that putt left-centre and miss the hole, you’re off the green because of how much slope there is.

“You could see Rory aiming at least a cup left from three feet. They severely underplayed how difficult that putt was. Severely.
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Rory McIlroy missed out on winning the US Open last month as he finished behind Bryson DeChambeau((Image: GETTY))

“I think that can happen a few times where, unless you’ve been there on the golf course and you’re playing it or you’ve played it, it’s hard to truly explain how difficult the golf course can be. A lot of times they only have those five seconds to say something quickly, so I also don’t blame them. But besides that, I thought it was good.”
After his disappointment in North Carolina, McIlroy took a break but is now ready to return to the Scottish Open next week, which will take place at The Renaissance Club.
Earlier this week, the club’s management installed a plaque to honor McIlroy, who clinched victory last year with an impressive shot from 202 yards on the final hole. Following the Scottish Open, the seasoned golfer will compete in The Open a week later.

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Rory McIlroy has been heavily linked with a move to the Saudi Arabian-backed LIV Golf in recent months, but the former world No.1 insists his future is with the PGA Tour

(Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

Rory McIlroy has always made his stance on the controversial LIV Golf crystal clear, despite ongoing discussions between the PGA Tour and the Saudi-backed series about a possible merger.

In an ESPN interview in April, the 35-year-old golf star reaffirmed his commitment to the PGA Tour. He also clarified that neither he nor his representatives have received a concrete offer from LIV Golf, dismissing any reported figures as mere speculation.

“I honestly don’t know how these things get started,” McIlroy expressed to Golf Channel in April, according to ESPN. I’ve never been offered a number from LIV, and I’ve never contemplated going to LIV. Again, I think I’ve made it clear over the past two years that I don’t think it’s something for me.”

Despite being a staunch advocate for the PGA Tour and one of the most outspoken opponents of the Saudi tour, McIlroy acknowledges the shift in his perspective as more golfers, including friends, join LIV for lucrative deals and financial security. Yet, his allegiance to the PGA Tour hasn’t wavered.
READ MORE: PGA Tour star who made misconstrued Rory McIlroy comment is making career switchREAD MORE: Rory McIlroy gave Liverpool owner John Henry blunt ‘No’ reply in private PGA Tour chat

“It doesn’t mean that I judge people who have went and played over there,” he added. “I think one of the things that I have realized over the past two years is that people can make their own decisions for whatever they think is best for themselves, and who are we to judge them for that? But personally, for me, my future is here on the PGA Tour, and it’s never been any different.”

It’s a distinct shift from last year when he continued to express a strong dislike for LIV Golf. “I still hate LIV. Like, I hate LIV. Like, I hope it goes away,” he declared before the RBC Canadian Open.

But McIlroy has also lamented the current situation in golf, saying: “It’s unfortunate we have to deal with it, and this is the state our game is in. I’m obviously here and going to the PGA Tour event next week, and I’ll play the PGA Tour the rest of my career.”

Rory McIlroy dismissed rumors of a potential LIV Golf deal(Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

However, as talks between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf continue, McIlroy seems more open to discussing the Saudi-backed series. In January, he mentioned: “It would be much better being together and moving forward together for the good of the game.”

“That’s my opinion of it. So to me, the faster that we can all get back together and start to play and start to have the strongest fields possible I think is great for golf.”
Moreover, McIlroy acknowledged having conversations with fellow golfers about LIV Golf, suggesting that understanding their choices requires an “open mind”.
“I think the one thing I’ve realized as well is guys need to keep an open mind, and I’m sure there’s been players that are still playing on the PGA Tour that have talked to the guys from LIV and had offers and whatever,” he revealed.

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Rory McIlroy warned that LIV Golf would not ‘slow down’ after the Saudi-backed league burst onto the professional golf scene in 2022, and his fears have seemingly been proven right

Rory McIlroy predicted a bright future for LIV Golf(Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Rory McIlroy’s forecast that LIV Golf is not slowing down appears to be coming true, with the Saudi-backed league expanding yet again this week.

Bursting onto the professional golf scene in the summer of 2022, LIV’s threat along with Saudi Arabia’s backing was initially dismissed by those at the PGA Tour. Two years later, the league is positioned as one of golf’s leading circuits, shoulder to shoulder with the Tour.

This week saw Will Newell, the creative director of the Saudi-backed series, announce a new office launch in London. Posting on Instagram, Newell wrote “New London office opens this week. Fit out by Echospace London,” along with a set of photos.

READ MORE: Rory McIlroy gave Liverpool owner John Henry blunt ‘No’ reply in private PGA Tour chatREAD MORE: LIV Golf star vows to ‘outwork the crackheads’ in odd motivational message to fans
Now having offices in London, Florida, and New York – the latter recently expanded due to increasing staff numbers – LIV’s growth has been acknowledged even by one of the league’s biggeet critics. “I certainly don’t see in the next couple of years LIV slowing down,” McIlroy said to Sports Illustrated in June.

“They’re buying office space in New York. They have over 200 employees. I don’t see a world where and I haven’t heard any of those guys say that they don’t want to play over there either, right? You’ve got guys who are on contracts until 2028, 2029. Looking a few years down the line, LIV is going to continue to sort of keep going down its path.

“But hopefully with maybe more of a collaboration or an understanding between the tours. Maybe there is some cross-pollenation there where players can start to play on both. I guess that will all be talked about in the coming weeks. “The only thing is there are so many tours and so many golf tournaments. There are only a certain amount of weeks in the year.

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Greg Norman has grand plans for the future of LIV Golf(Jason Butler/Getty Images)

That’s the complicated part. Trying to figure out which tournaments go where, when do we play them, how many players, what players.” In spite of their initial attempts to quell the advancement of their rivals, the PGA Tour was forced to perform a u-turn after announcing they had reached at a framework agreement with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia (PIF) last June.
Over a year later though, no concrete deal has been completed. Recent reports suggest there has been some movement Fire Pit Collective’s Alan Shipnuck announced last month that a ‘draft agreement’ had been approved. That said, Jay Monahan, Tour commissioner, later issued a memo to his players explaining there was still more work to come.
Monahan penned: “Both parties recognize that there is still work to do to reach a final agreement. Our talks are ongoing with the goal of developing a shared vision for the future of professional golf that is pro-competitive and provides players with the best global opportunities.”

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Michael Block made a name for himself when playing alongside Rory McIlroy at last year’s PGA Championship, and the American has now set his sights on a career change

Michael Block made eye-catching claims about Rory McIlroy(Getty Images)

PGA Championship fan favourite Michael Block has set his sights on turning to senior golf, and earning a spot on the PGA Tour Champions.

Block rose to fame at last year’s PGA Championship, when the club professional finished in a tie for 15th at Oak Hill Country Club. He infamously made an incredible slam-dunk hole-in-one at the par-three 15th during his final round where he was paired with four-time major champion Rory McIlroy.

Since then the teaching professional has competed in a whole host of PGA Tour events – including his return to the PGA Championship in May. At 48 however, the American is now keen to make the step into senior golf.

READ MORE: John Henry took on ‘bidding war’ after hearing about PGA Tour-LIV Golf mergerREAD MORE: Rory McIlroy gave Liverpool owner John Henry blunt ‘No’ reply in private PGA Tour chat
Speaking with Bunkered, Block admitted he was finding it difficult to keep up with the current crop of stars, and was instead keen on turning the Champions Tour. “I’d consider the Champions Tour in about a year-and-a-half,” he commented. “The kids now are so good and the scores they’re shooting out there are unbelievable.

“These young kids are unreal, and I want nothing to do with them. I’m more than happy to play the occasional events and the majors, I love what I do, but I have my eyes set on the Champions Tour. At age 49 I can start to qualify and then the day I turn 50 I can play.

“My wife pretty much has an ultimatum that I have to do it. Eventually, I see myself retiring at 55 because I’d love to give the Champions Tour a go for five years.” It has not been all simple during his time in the limelight, after Block raised eyebrows with his comments on McIlroy.

For all the latest on news, politics, sports, and showbiz from the USA, go to The Mirror US.

Michael Block is eyeing the Champions Tour(Getty Images)

In the aftermath of his US PGA success last May, Block appeared to claim that he too could be one of the best players in the world if he had the distance off the tea that McIlroy possesses. “He’s a lot longer than I am, that’s what it is. What I would shoot from where Rory hits it would be stupid, I think I’d be one of the best players in the world, hands down,” Block told the RipperMagoo Podcast.

“If I had that stupid length, all day, my iron game, wedge game, around the greens and my putting is world class.” He did however go on to add context to his comments, telling Golf Monthly: “It was totally misconstrued, misconceived, the whole thing. I really feel like if you’re a real golfer, you kind of understood what I had meant.
“If I gained 60 yards, if I had a gap wedge into every green rather than a four iron into every green, would I be better? I’d be a whole hell of a lot better. Would I be better than Roy McIlroy? Absolutely not. Rory is an absolute stud and at no point, in any shape or form, was I ever trying to say anything about Rory or the tour professionals.
“I was just one hundred per cent saying, if I had an extra 60 yards off of every tee, every day of my life, would I be on tour? Probably. Guaranteed? Absolutely not… It was taken completely out of context but is also my fault, I guess. I said it the wrong way. I did a couple of thousand interviews [after the tournament] but I guess I did say one thing wrong but it’s okay.”

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Over a year ago, news of a potential partnership between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf hit the golfing world in a shock twist.

Talks over this deal are still continuing over 12 months on with the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund (PIF) – who bankroll LIV Golf – noting that things are “continuing to progress”. This prospect has caused waves in the golf community, with many athletes chiming in with their take on the situation.

Three active PGA Tour members sit on the subcommittee – Rory McIlroy, Tiger Woods and Adam Scott – alongside PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, chairman Joe Gorder, John Henry and Joe Ogilvie.

The frameworks of a deal were announced previously, but talks are still ongoing to finalise terms as players and fans begin to get restless. The Mirror has looked at the latest on the situation.

Talks progressing among invested parties
PIF and PGA have jointly confirmed in the last month that talks are “continuing to progress”, despite the initial deadline of December 31, 2023 being long gone.

The joint statement read: “Representatives from the PGA TOUR Enterprises Transaction Subcommittee and the PIF have been meeting multiple times weekly to work through potential deal terms and come to a shared vision on the future of professional golf. On Friday evening, an in-person session in New York City included the entire Transaction Subcommittee and PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan and his team, where more progress was made.”

Both PGA and PIF have expressed their optimism that a deal will be made on the future of professional golf as it stands – and the money has already begun to change hands.

The PGA Tour received a cash injection of up to $3billion (£2.3bn) from Strategic Sports Group – an initial investment of $1.5bn was collected upfront and a further $1.5bn will head PGA’s way at some point in the future.

While the talks continue on and reported progress is made, the lack of conclusion has irked some of the current committee members.
McIlroy’s backseat role in merger deal

Rory McIlroy is part of a committee alongside other active golfers(Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

While McIlroy is part of the transaction committee alongside Woods and Scott, he announced recently that he would be stepping back to allow people who were better suited to handle the “big boy stuff” during negotiations.
The Mirror reported last month McIlroy said: “There’s going to be people in that room on the PGA Tour side who are going to take the lead. And it’s not going to be Adam, Tiger or I. That’s going to be Jay, Joe Gorder, Joe Ogilvie, John Henry. It’s going to be the business guys. We’re there to maybe give a perspective from a player’s point of view.
“This is a negotiation about an investment in the PGA Tour Enterprises, this is big boy stuff. And I’ll certainly be doing more listening than I will be doing talking.”
These conversations have come over a year after McIlroy told fans he “still hated LIV Golf” following the announcement of the potential merger.
At the time, he said: “Whether you like it or not, the PIF are going to keep spending money in golf… at least the PGA Tour now controls how that money is spent.
“One of the biggest sovereign wealth funds in the world, would you rather have them as a partner or an enemy? At the end of the day, money talks and you’d rather have them as a partner.”
Now, it seems like his stance towards LIV and PIF has softened and he is more open to the merger deal with the introduction of active players in a committee to help iron out some of the details.
McIlroy said: “My stance on some of the LIV stuff has softened. They’re contracted to play 14 events, but the other 38 weeks of the year you’re free to do what you want.
“The only thing is there are so many tours and so many golf tournaments. There are only a certain amount of weeks in the year. That’s the complicated part. Trying to figure out which tournaments go where, when do we play them, how many players, what players.”
DeChambeau’s hopes for his favourite PGA events

DeChambeau made the switch to LIV Golf in 2022(David Cannon/Getty Images)

DeChambeau was one of the major names to defect from the PGA Tour to join LIV Golf in a shock decision back in 2022 – but he did note that he hopes he can play some of his favourite PGA Tour events once again thanks to the possibility of the merger.
A lucrative offer of £98million over four years was the ticket to DeChambeau’s change of tune to LIV, but he has claimed the decision was made based on his family.
DeChambeau said: “People can say I moved to one side, but I did it for my family and what I had in front of me at that point in time. I think my mom would have probably smacked me for not taking the deal.”
The American has encouraged those involved in the merger deal to continue liaising with golfers on each side of the coin – both PGA and LIV – and notes that he hopes to play in some of his favourite events from PGA once again.
Speaking to Gulf News, DeChambeau said: “Look, I would love to continue to showcase my skill set around the world in different places, whether it be Shriners or the Arnold Palmer, Mr. Nicklaus’ event [The Memorial], TPC Las Vegas.
“I’d love to play those events. They’ve been great to me. Shoot, even Riviera [Genesis Invitational]. I’d love to play Tiger’s event; put on a fantastic event in a good community and around some great people. That’s what I look forward to hopefully being able to do down the road.”
He added: “Do I want to play a full schedule? You know what, I don’t know. We’ll see how things shake out. I don’t know what the future is going to look like, and I’m not here to decide that. But would I like to play a few? Sure, ones that I truly enjoyed and had a lot of friends with and helped impact the community in a positive way, absolutely.”
Garcia: Merger poses ‘bright future’ for golf

Garcia also made the LIV switch(Jan Kruger/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)

Sergio Garcia, one of the many big names that departed to LIV Golf in 2022, has admitted that he thinks the deal could mean a bright future for the professional game.
Speaking at the Masters in April, the Spaniard played down any talk of hostile behaviour as the discussions continued between both parties for a deal.
He said: “I think the game is in a perfect spot. The professional game, maybe it’s a little more separated, mostly because of the media, not so much because of the players. But I think the game itself is in a great spot. I think that we have the most amount of people playing the game, which is great, and people have to realize one thing, that the future of the game isn’t us.

“We’re not the future of the game. Neither me or Rory [McIlroy], no. We’re not the future. We’re the present of the game… I mean, obviously the more togetherness that you get, the better it is for everyone. There’s no doubt about that. But there’s room for everyone. I don’t think that’s a problem at all.
“The same way that I love watching Real Madrid and La Liga, you like to watch the premiership and whoever your team is. Everybody can support whoever they have, and there’s plenty of people to support it.”
Spieth determined to keep thoughts close

Spieth has been coy about his stance on the PGA-LIV talks(Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

Jordan Spieth, a current member on the PGA Tour’s policy board, has admitted he may risk “getting in trouble” if he discusses the ongoing merger deal.
The American has been determined to keep his cards close to his chest when it comes to his thoughts on the current negotiations as the Mirror reported that he said he’d like to see it “done right for everyone”.
Spieth said: “That’s an extremely loaded question that I could get in a lot of trouble answering. I’ll just say things of that nature take a little bit of time, but they’re very active. That’s about as far as I can go for you.”

During the same pre-John Deere Classic press conference, reporters pressed him on if he’d like the deal to be done sooner rather than later, to which he added: “I would like to see it done right for everyone. So the timing is the timing.
“Obviously if anything can be done right and done sooner, that’s great. But I would rather see it done correctly and done the right way for golf going forward for the longest amount of time, regardless how long that takes to get there, yeah.”
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