Commissioner Jay Monahan and player directors Tiger Woods and Adam Scott are meeting with officials at the White House on Thursday as discussions for a PGA Tour-LIV Golf merger continue, sources tell ESPN.
In a conversation with Grant Horvat, Adam Scott talked about various topics, and Horvat's question attracted special attention.
In this edition of Play Smart, we learn how AimPoint green reading works in one minute from former Masters champ Adam Scott.
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, Tiger Woods and Adam Scott met with President Donald Trump and Saudi businessman Yasir Al-Rumayyan on Thursday at the White House to discuss a merger
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Tennis World on MSNScott discusses the potential negative feelings tied to LIV Golf players rejoiningI wouldnt be surprised -- or I wouldnt judge anyone, the members -- if reunification happened and they werent happy with how it happened, Scott said.
More than 18 months since the two rival sides shocked the sports world by announcing a "framework" merger agreement, the PGA Tour and LIV Golf are still hammering out the finer details.
Rory McIlroy believes reunifying with players who defected to Saudi-funded LIV Golf is what's best for the PGA Tour membership and “everyone's just got to get over it” and move forward. Adam Scott will understand if there's still bad feelings.
Adam Scott, who is at the forefront of reunification discussions with LIV Golf, said he wouldn't be surprised if PGA Tour members would be unhappy if it happens.
As discussions between LIV and the PGA Tour heat up, there is another side to the tour's merger negotiations that won't play out until players from both sides return to the same courses. RELATED: President Trump saves merger talks between LIV and PGA Tour It's been nearly three years now since LIV first launched,
Adam Scott expects at least some PGA Tour members to be upset if some sort of reunification of the sport happens in the near future. Scott, who is the Tour’s Player Advisory Council chairman and joined commissioner Jay Monahan at the White House earlier this month to discuss negotiations with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and LIV Golf,
Adam Scott thinks there will be some hard feelings if LIV golfers are welcomed back onto the PGA Tour. “I wouldn’t be surprised—or I wouldn’t judge anyone, the members—if reunification happened and they weren’t happy with how it happened,
With talks of the PGA Tour and LIV Golf joining forces, Adam Scott says it may not be ‘rainbows and unicorns’ after all.
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