Don’t call it a comeback!
On Tuesday afternoon, LIV Golf announced it would shift all events to 72 holes effective immediately, bringing the rival league in line with the competitive standard in the remainder of pro golf. The move clears one potential hurdle from the runway as the league seeks to achieve entrance into the Official World Golf Ranking (or OWGR), providing LIV players with access to the all-powerful world ranking points used to determine major championship eligibility.
Though the move to 72 holes had been mulled and rumored, it still arrived as a stunner to the golf world on Tuesday. A significant piece of LIV’s initial sell to golf was its 54-hole events, which league officials said slimmed costs and streamlined the viewing experience. Indeed, even LIV’s name was tied to its 54-hole identity, originating from the Roman numeral for “54.” (LIV has also tied the number 54 to a “perfect” score in golf — 18 birdies on a par-72 course.)
“We will continue to have that conversation going forward,” former LIV CEO Greg Norman said about the possibility of a 72-hole shift in the summer of 2024. “But we sit back and say, what value do we get from putting on television on Thursday? How do we build out in the future?”
Radical as LIV’s thinking might have been, no amount of innovation could help the league overcome two hard truths: LIV needed OWGR status to provide a pathway to major championship eligibility, and major championship eligibility was needed to meaningfully steal talent or market share from the PGA Tour and DP World Tours. (Previously, the only pathways for a LIV player into the majors were an exemption from previous major championship success, a special exemption, or qualifying.)























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