Home Golf The PGA Tour Is Officially Welcoming Back Select LIV Players

The PGA Tour Is Officially Welcoming Back Select LIV Players

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In what might be the biggest news the professional golf world has seen over the past couple of years, the PGA Tour announced a limited window for LIV players to return.

In a letter from CEO Brian Rolapp, the Tour finally outlined parameters for certain LIV players looking to find their way back. And, as it turns out, former LIV player Brooks Koepka is one of four players who meets the criteria. He will be immediately reinstated on Tour.

Here is what the Tour outlined in its newly established returning member program:

  • To be eligible, players must have won a major or the Players Championship from 2022-2025. This includes Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm and Cameron Smith.
  • The returning member program closes on February 2, giving the remaining players a limited time window to decide whether they would like to apply for Tour membership. “This is a one-time, defined window and does not set a precedent for future situations,” the letter reads. “Once the door closes, there is no promise that this path will be available again.”
  • Returning players are eligible for the Players Championship and other full-field events, but they’ll have to earn his way into the eight signature events this season by winning a tournament or qualifying through one of three pathways: Aon Next 10 (top 10 golfers in FedEx Cup points not otherwise exempt through the tournament leading up to a signature event); Aon Swing 5 (top five in FedEx Cup points earners between signature events who are not otherwise exempt); or the top 30 in the Official World Golf Ranking who are not otherwise eligible. DeChambeau is No. 26 in the OWGR; Rahm is No. 87 and Smith is No. 207.
  • Returning players must agree to five-year forfeiture of participating in the player equity program, which the Tour values at $50-85 million (it’s a little optimistic, but hey).
  • Returning players must compete in a minimum of 15 Tour events, so this is not a situation where a player can still be on LIV while coming back to the Tour.
  • Returning players won’t receive FedEx Cup bonus money in 2026.
  • Returning players must make a $5 million charitable contribution.
  • All fields will be expanded to include returning players. Current members won’t lose their spot in any fields because of this move.
  • Returning players are eligible for the Presidents Cup and TGL (the latter might be considered a punishment).

In lockstep with Rolapp’s letter, Koepka announced he will be playing the Farmers Insurance Open and WM Phoenix Open.

Now we wait to see what the other three players will do

Wow. This is a massive development.

While Smith isn’t that big of a fish here, DeChambeau or Rahm leaving LIV would be an absolute dagger that could cut the breakaway league in half (and it’s not exactly thriving as it is).

Who else would the Tour want back at this point? You could argue the likes of Tyrrell Hatton and Joaquin Niemann would be nice to have back in the fold, but it’s really DeChambeau, Rahm and Koepka who were the biggest three names on the board.

Let’s get one thing straight here: Rolapp and Co. absolutely cooked with this move.

By only allowing a few weeks for players to decide, it’s a firm move that forces their hand.

At the same time, the penalty for coming back is fairly reasonable on all sides.

LIV players don’t really have to pay anything to come back—they are just forfeiting future earnings. That isn’t too hard to stomach given how they can return immediately.

The only LIV player who would likely be allowed back into the signature events is DeChambeau, based on his world ranking. The other three would have to earn their way back there, which seems fair.

“We recognize that there may be questions about how this policy holds a returning player accountable, especially after earning substantial compensation elsewhere,” Rolapp wrote. “Ultimately, by accepting membership in the Returning Member category, Brooks is making the decision to return to the PGA Tour now—something our fans want, and something that strengthens both the game and our organization.”

Say what you want about the Tour (and I’ve criticized them plenty), but this is a shrewd decision that is coming at exactly the right time given Koepka’s decision.

Is the punishment severe enough?

A lot of people will be upset that LIV players earned so much money and got to return without harsher consequences. That’s understandable.

But at a certain point, the Tour would benefit immensely from star players returning and improving the product. That includes current Tour players.

And even if they only get one of DeChambeau or Rahm, LIV would be in an even deeper spiral.

How would it help the Tour if they asked Koepka, DeChambeau, Rahm and Smith to sit out a year from Tour competition? It’s just another season for them to play on LIV (or pick up starts somewhere else).

Ultimately, the Tour made a decision that it wants its top guys back as soon as possible. This option doesn’t guarantee that, but it’s a good bet at least one of the three players hits the eject button on LIV.

Okay, MGS readers—what do we think about this? Good move by the Tour? Does the punishment make sense? Which of the remaining three players will come back?

Let me know below in the comments.

The post The PGA Tour Is Officially Welcoming Back Select LIV Players appeared first on MyGolfSpy.



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