With the start of its fifth season one month away, LIV Golf has reportedly agreed to add two players to its roster.
Tom Kershaw of The Times reported Tuesday that Thomas Detry and Elvis Smylie will join the breakaway league.
Detry is the 57th-ranked golfer in the Official World Golf Rankings and won last year’s Waste Management Phoenix Open in a runaway.
“It’s incredible,” Detry said after the win at TPC Scottsdale, his first on the PGA Tour. “It’s what dreams are made of. That last walk on the last hole was incredible. Everything goes so quickly that you don’t really have time to enjoy it — luckily, my caddie was there to tell me to enjoy the moment. It’s pretty special.”
Less than 12 months later, Detry reportedly will join LIV in the Saudi-backed league’s highest-ranked signing since it added Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton in 2024. Per Kershaw, Detry will join the 4Aces alongside Dustin Johnson, Patrick Reed and Thomas Pieters, with Harold Varner III moving over to Smash GC.
Smylie is a 23-year-old Australian whose biggest win to date came at the 2024 BMW Australian PGA Championship; he would be a natural fit to join the Australian team of Ripper GC, which parted ways with Matt Jones after last season. Jones is in the field at this week’s LIV Promotions Event.
The reported signings of Detry and Smylie comes at the end of a rocky offseason for LIV, which saw the breakaway league lose Brooks Koepka, who left the league to spend “more time” with his family.
Koepka’s exit and the uncertainty surrounding his potential return to the PGA Tour have created several unanswerable questions about the future of LIV and the fractured state of professional golf.
Rory McIlroy said if it were up to him, he’d welcome Koepka back onto the PGA Tour should the five-time major champion wish. But McIlroy also acknowledged that the decision is more complex than that.
“Does it make sense if Brooks wanted to play the PGA Tour again to get him back as soon as possible? Absolutely,” McIlroy told The Palm Beach Post on Friday after his Boston Common Golf team won their TGL match over Los Angeles Golf Club. “What Brooks has done in the game of golf, it would be good for everyone to have him back.
“It’s hard (because) you can’t treat one person differently than you treat others,” McIlroy said. “And as much as the Tour would like to treat Brooks differently, it sets a legal precedent, because of the lawsuits that have been going on and everything else behind the scenes. He’s still exempt on Tour because of his major wins. That’s not the hurdle. The hurdle is how they have treated others that have tried to come back, serve suspensions, or whatever it is. That’s the difficult thing.”























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