In 2025, the world of professional golf is caught in an unprecedented struggle for identity, influence, and the loyalty of both fans and top players. Almost three years have passed since the emergence of LIV Golf, a Saudi-financed competitor that shook the traditional landscape of the PGA Tour. The rivalry quickly evolved into a high-stakes power struggle, with some of the world’s best golfers switching allegiances for contracts that dwarfed anything previously seen in the sport. According to The Daily Upside, players like Dustin Johnson and Phil Mickelson were reportedly lured by offers over 100 million dollars each, deals that far exceeded their career earnings on the PGA Tour. Alongside the influx of star players, LIV presented itself as a bold alternative, with a team-based format, global schedule, and massive prize purses, aiming to attract both a younger audience and a new era for the game. Yet, this disruption has not come without intense controversy. Accusations that LIV Golf was a vehicle for sportswashing—an attempt to use sports to distract from human rights concerns tied to its Saudi backing—gained as much attention as the on-course action. The PGA Tour responded defensively, ramping up purses, innovating event formats, and even purging LIV defectors from its membership. Despite all this, the professional game remains divided. In 2023, there was a major announcement that the PGA Tour and the Saudi Public Investment Fund intended to combine their commercial interests—a move initially described as a merger. As reported by SWX Golf and Golf Monthly, actual progress has barely crept forward since, and the proposed deal remains stalled over the structure of governance, equity distribution, and whether the LIV brand would survive inside a single unified tour. Fans and players alike are caught in the uncertainty, some advocating for unity, others wary of the fundamental changes such a union would bring. Meanwhile, the DP World Tour, formerly the European Tour, has found itself in the middle ground. Some events have accepted LIV competitors, provided fines are paid or appealed, even as the wider game remains fractured. This further complicates the scene, highlighting just how global and entangled top-level golf has become. TV ratings show the PGA Tour still holds a substantial edge in viewership, even after LIV inked a multi-year broadcast deal with Fox Sports. All this has left the future of the professional game open-ended. Will golf see a unified global tour, or will two separate visions for the sport continue to split attention, talent, and tradition? Regardless, the only certainty in 2025 is that the battle for the soul of golf is not yet finished. Thank you for tuning in, and be sure to come back next week for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, and for more, check out Quiet Please Dot A I. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI