Greg Norman urges Rory McIlroy to thank LIV Golf
Greg Norman said "I really have changed the game of golf more than what people realize" in a recent interview.
During his time as LIV Golf CEO, Greg Norman never missed an opportunity to promote the fledging golf league, often with a bombastic tone that only seemed to fuel the tension the Saudi-backed endeavor created while disrupting the world of men’s professional golf.
LIV Golf’s outgoing CEO Greg Norman has asked Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy to both recognise that they have benefited from the breakaway league’s creation. Woods and McIlroy, two of golf’s biggest names, have been staunch opponents of LIV Golf and offered the PGA Tour its biggest show of strength when they remained with the established circuit.
Former LIV Golf CEO and PGA Tour legend Greg Norman sat down for an interview this week in the wake of the news that LIV Golf had hired Scott O'Neil to
LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman to be replaced as the breakaway league's boss, and now the PGA Tour stars have got their way
Former LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman wants to sit down and bury the hatchet with Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy and hear them admit they’ve benefited hugely from the Saudi-backed circuit.
Former LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman "would love to sit down" and talk with Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy about how they've financially benefited from
Woods publicly called for Norman to step down from LIV Golf in the interests of mending fences between the breakaway circuit and the PGA Tour. McIlroy blamed Norman in part for a “civil war” in golf, previously saying that he should “exit stage left” to allow the “adults” to patch up the sport’s schism.
The British Open returns to St. Andrews in 2027 for the 31st time. And that begs the question of whether Tiger Woods will have one last chance to compete at the Old Course.
Greg Norman has stepped down as LIV Golf CEO and asked Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy to recognise how they've benefitted from the league.
Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods imposed themselves as the main critics of LIV Golf after the arrival of the Saudi-backed Tour on the golf scene. Two leading names on the golf scene were not open to the arrival of the Saudis in the world of golf, aware that with money they can manipulate the golf market and attract money-hungry golfers to their Tour.