If you've found the news currently swirling around LIV Golf murky and confusing, don't worry, you're not alone. So does PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp, who admitted on Monday's edition of The Pat McAfee Show on Monday that not even tour leadership truly knows what's happening with their chief rivals at this juncture.
Despite the continued uncertainy, however, Rolapp's response shed some light on the tour plans to handle the potential chaos a LIV liquidation would pose. Asked point blank if players would be offered a direct path back a la Brooks Koepka, Rolapp was non-commital, only ackonwledging that the tour is actively "thinking about it," but he did make one thing clear: Don't expect anything imminently.
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"We know those guys [current LIV players] are under contract and we'll respect that. Brooks came back on to the tour because he made a phone call and said 'I'm out of my contract, I'm ready to come back.' ... We'll react when we have an opportunity to react but right now we're focused on making the PGA Tour better."
Spoken like a true CEO, but if you're reading between the lines, it doesn't seem like the tour, at least at this stage, is prepared to make an aggressive push to further unsettle LIV Golf. As Rolapp explains, Koepka was no longer a LIV player when he struck his return agreement with the PGA Tour, so that is not necessarily an accurate predictor of PGA Tour's LIV policy or strategy moving forward. This could all change at the drop of a hat (or rather, the drop of oil-state funding), but for now it sounds like it's business as usual in Ponte Vedra.
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