Even Amid Funding Questions, LIV Golf’s Defiant Ascent: From Outcast to Global Force

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Jon Rahm of Legion XIII wins LIV Golf Mexico City
Jon Rahm of Legion XIII walks through 18th green during day four of LIV Golf Mexico City at Club de Golf Chapultepec on April 19, 2026 in Mexico City. (Photo by Hector Vivas via Getty Images)

In an era when professional golf’s old guard clung desperately to its century-old monopoly, a brash, Saudi-backed upstart — ironically spearheaded by an iconic golfer nicknamed “The Shark” — arrived in 2022 promising disruption.

Critics sneered. Media outlets scoffed. Rory McIlroy famously claimed the new tour was “dead in the water.”

The PGA Tour, long accustomed to unchallenged dominance, branded LIV Golf an existential threat and responded with lawsuits, player bans, and a full-court press of institutional outrage.

Bryson Dechambeau LIV Golf Adelaide 2026
Crowd watches Bryson Dechambeau of Crushers tee off at the Watering Hole during day four of LIV Adelaide at The Grange Golf Club on February 15, 2026 in Adelaide, Australia. (Photo by Mark Brake via Getty Images)

Yet here we stand, just four years later, April 2026, with LIV Golf not merely surviving but thriving as the Official World Golf Ranking’s accredited tour, staging traditional 72-hole stroke-play events and delivering world-class talent to a genuinely global schedule that the PGA Tour has never matched.

The PGA Tour had spent decades cultivating an ecosystem with an iron fist: television deals, sponsor loyalty, and a calendar that kept the game’s biggest stars tethered to weekends in the United States.

LIV’s arrival shattered that comfort. It offered guaranteed contracts, massive purses, and a format that prioritized entertainment alongside competition. The backlash was immediate and ferocious. Headlines painted LIV as little more than a sportswashing vehicle; pundits dismissed its team format and 54-hole shotgun starts as gimmicks unworthy of “real” golf.

LIV Golf Adelaide 12th
A general view as Ian Poulter of Majesticks GC tees off on the 12th hole during LIV Adelaide at The Grange Golf Club on April 26, 2024 in Adelaide, Australia. (Photo by Asanka Ratnayake via Getty Images)

Golf’s establishment circled the wagons, with some of the PGA Tour’s top players even publicly shaming defectors — one-time friends and colleagues.

Yet LIV refused to fold. It doubled down on its vision, evolving rapidly in response to legitimate critiques. By the 2026 season, the league had a new CEO in Scott O’Neil and transitioned to the 72-hole individual stroke-play format its critics had long demanded, while retaining the team element that gives fans something fresh to cheer.

The league also updated its dress code, requiring players to wear long pants (trousers) during competition (unless it’s above 90) to present a more professional tour look, further aligning with the established standards of elite golf.

Thomas Detry
Thomas Detry of 4Aces GC tees off on the first hole during day four of LIV Golf Hong Kong at Hong Kong Golf Club on March 08, 2026 in Hong Kong, China. (Photo by Kate McShane via Getty Images)

And in February 2026, after years of denials, the OWGR Board finally granted LIV events world-ranking points for the first time. Points are only allocated to the top-10 finishers in individual events, but the message was unmistakable: performance on LIV courses now counts on the global stage. Just ask Jon Rahm. Due to exceptional form in the first six LIV Golf events of the 2026 season, the former world No. 1 has earned 96.4 OWGR points, moving from No. 97 to start the season to No. 20 after winning the Mexico City title.

That accreditation is proof that LIV has overcome the entrenched monopoly. LIV’s players are no longer invisible in the Official World Golf Ranking; stars like Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, and Tyrrell Hatton are all ranked inside the top 30 as top LIV finishes now count.

Joaquin Niemann
Joaquin Niemann of Torque GC in action on day three of LIV Golf UK by JCB at JCB Golf & Country Club on July 27, 2025 in Uttoxeter, England. (Photo by Jan Kruger via Getty Images)

Even more impressive is the geographic reach. While the PGA Tour remains heavily USA-centric, LIV’s 2026 schedule reads like a travel brochure for golf’s future: Riyadh (Saudi Arabia), Adelaide (Australia), Hong Kong, Singapore, Johannesburg area (South Africa), Mexico City (Mexico), Busan (South Korea), Sotogrande at Real Club Valderrama (Spain), JCB Golf & Country Club (England), plus five U.S. stops — all in pro sports-crazed markets: New York/New Jersey, D.C., Detroit, New Orleans and Indianapolis.

This is not token internationalism. It is a truly global circuit that brings elite competition to regions the PGA Tour has historically ignored. Golf fans in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and Oceania are witnessing live, high-stakes golf featuring major champions and rising stars in venues that showcase each destination’s unique character.

Jon Rahm 2025 LIV Golf Andalucia
Jon Rahm of Legion XIII tees off on the first hole on day three of LIV Golf Andalucia at Valderrama on July 13, 2025 in Cádiz, Spain. (Photo by Angel Martinez via Getty Images)

A perfect illustration came on Sunday. Anyone who flipped between LIV Golf Mexico City (FS1) and the PGA Tour’s RBC Heritage (CBS) on split screen would have struggled to declare one event clearly more elite than the other.

At Club de Golf Chapultepec in Mexico City, two-time major champion Jon Rahm delivered a commanding performance, closing with a bogey-free 7-under 64 to win by six shots at 21-under overall — his second individual victory of the season. Spaniards swept the podium (Rahm, alongside young guns David Puig, 24, and Josele Ballester, 22), while Rahm’s Legion XIII team also claimed the team title amid a passionate, packed house of Spanish-speaking fans in a vibrant international setting complete with high-end production and branding.

Jon Rahm of Legion XIII wins LIV Golf Mexico City. Matt Fitzpatrick wins 2026 RBC Heritage in playoff Scottie Scheffler
Left TV: Matt Fitzpatrick winning in Hilton Head at Harbour Town Golf Links Right TV: Jon Rahm winning LIV Golf Mexico City. On TV, both had big league vibes and visuals. (Getty Images/PGW Graphics)

Meanwhile, at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head, South Carolina, 2022 U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick held off world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler in a dramatic playoff. Fitzpatrick, who entered the final round with a sizable lead, stumbled late with a bogey on the 72nd hole but answered with a clutch birdie on the first extra hole to secure his second RBC Heritage title and second PGA Tour win of the season.

It was a Sunday of high-end talent from Mexico City to Hilton Head: elite fields, passionate galleries, premium branding, and world-class golf delivered at the highest level on both sides of the border… and TV screens.

Recent reports have highlighted funding questions surrounding the Public Investment Fund’s (PIF) commitment, noting that excessive Saudi backing may not extend indefinitely, with some outlets even suggesting a mid-season shutdown as PIF evaluates broader strategic priorities.

Brandon Grace LIV Golf South Africa 2026
Brandon Grace of Southern Guards GC on the seventeenth tee box during day three of LIV Golf South Africa at The Club at Steyn City on March 21, 2026 in Johannesburg. (Photo by Johan Rynners via Getty Images)

CEO Scott O’Neil, who replaced Greg Norman in 2025, has been unequivocal: the 2026 season will proceed “as planned, uninterrupted and at full throttle,” with full funding secured through year-end.

These developments do not diminish LIV’s accomplishments; if anything, they highlight the league’s remarkable resilience in reaching this milestone: OWGR accreditation, a reimagined 72-hole format, updated professional tour dress code, a star-studded roster, and a footprint spanning five continents — all in under four years against relentless headwinds, including a media smear campaign usually reserved for politics.

“You know, I’m not sure,” said O’Neil, when asked about the media’s attacks. “I don’t spend a lot of time thinking about it.

“I’m disappointed with some of the coverage. I’ve never read — been in an industry that has more unnamed sources than this one. In fact, I was reading through some coverage this morning (Friday), and I couldn’t find one source on the record in all the articles that were written.”

Joaquin Niemann
Joaquin Niemann of Torque GC tees off at 9th hole during day four of LIV Golf Singapore at Sentosa Golf Club on March 15, 2026 in Singapore. (Photo by Thananuwat Srirasant via Getty Images)

The chorus of criticism labeling Saudi investment as reckless “burning of billions” often misses a basic business reality. Startups, particularly those challenging deeply entrenched monopolies like the PGA Tour’s decades-old grip on professional golf, operate with high “burn rates” by design. The term exists for a reason: significant upfront capital is required to build infrastructure, attract top talent, secure venues, create an alternative ecosystem, and weather institutional resistance before sustainable revenue streams mature.

“From a business standpoint, we did almost a half a billion dollars in sponsorship last year with big brands like Rolex and HSBC, Aramco; these are global brands,” O’Neil continued.

“I’m thinking we’re in a wonderful position. From a structural standpoint, this business will continue to evolve as it has over the last 12 months.”

Brendan Steele wins 2024 LIV Golf Adelaide
Brendan Steele hits a shot towards the 18th hole during the final round of LIV Golf Adelaide at the Grange Golf Club in Adelaide on April 28, 2024. (Photo by Brenton Edwards for AFP via Getty Images)

LIV Golf has good reason to be excited: they’ve hired a new CEO, assembled a league filled with both young stars and proven major champions, evolved its product (including the shift to 72 holes, a major network broadcaster, and a more traditional tour vibe), and is now attracting big brand sponsors like Salesforce, Rolex and HSBC.

In less than four years, LIV has become the clear No. 2 tour in men’s professional golf. It trails only the PGA Tour in prestige, depth of field, and cultural relevance. Despite disappointing results at this year’s Masters, its players consistently punch above their weight in majors, highlighted by two victories — the first modern majors won by a player who wasn’t a member of the PGA Tour or European Tour.

Further, despite the unrelenting criticism, its venues are bucket-list worthy, including Sentosa, Doral and Valderrama. And its willingness to go where the game has never gone has expanded golf’s footprint in ways the old monopoly never even attempted.

Dustin Johnson LIV Golf Miami
Dustin Johnson of 4 Aces GC celebrates making his putt on the 18th green and the 4 Aces GC team win during the team championship stroke-play round of the LIV Golf Invitational – Miami at Trump National Doral Miami on Oct 30, 2022 in Doral, Florida. (Photo by Joe Scarnici for LIV Golf via Getty Images)

“I know there’s some people rooting against LIV Golf,” said O’Neil, when asked about the progress of the young league and its global strategy.

“I understand that, okay. But is golf better without LIV Golf? Should all the best events in the world be in the Continental U.S.? Is that right? Should we be targeting 60-year-old [American] men, or should we put some focus on the global game? Should we put some focus on this next generation of fans?”

A vibrant, competitive professional golf tour ecosystem benefits everyone: fans, players, and the sport itself.

The critics who predicted LIV’s swift collapse have already been proven wrong on its core trajectory. The entrenched powers who tried to strangle it at birth have instead watched it evolve into a legitimate, OWGR-recognized global force.

2022 LIV Golf-London
Charl Schwartzel of Stinger GC putts on the 18th green during day 3 of LIV Golf Invitational–London at The Centurion Club on June 11, 2022 in St Albans, England. (Photo by Joe Maher for LIV Golf via Getty Images)

O’Neil added, “I’m American. I love the U.S. market. It’s the No. 1 TV market in the world, period, end of sentence, the No. 1 sponsorship market in the world, period, end of sentence. In golf, in sport.

“But long-term, do you want to bet on 340 million people or 7.5 billion people? That’s all I’m saying. That’s the only difference is I’m taking a 7.5 billion-person bet. That’s something we should be excited about because golf should be seen around the world with some of the biggest stars in the game, and that’s what we’re doing.”

LIV Golf has earned its seat at the table and placed its bet.

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