LIV Golf launched as a disruptive force in professional golf, offering unique appeals to diverse stakeholders. Recent developments confirm the league’s Saudi backing through the Public Investment Fund (PIF) will cease after 2026, marking the end of an era defined by unprecedented financial support.
Diverse Motivations Behind LIV Golf
The league served varied purposes from inception. For Saudi Arabia, it advanced Vision 2030 and NEOM projects through sports investment. Initial chief executive Greg Norman viewed it as a continuation of his long-standing challenge to PGA Tour dominance. Players gained substantial earnings with reduced schedules, enabling some to contribute to golf’s growth while others focused elsewhere.
Fans in the United States often linked LIV to cultural divides via affiliations like Donald Trump. Globally, supporters saw potential for true internationalization of the sport.
Suspension of Disbelief Crumbles
Sustaining LIV required overlooking key realities. Participants pretended Saudi Arabia prioritized events in Adelaide and Cape Town indefinitely. The PIF’s vast resources appeared bottomless despite losses exceeding $1 billion over three years.
The format—54-hole events, shotgun starts, team names like Cleeks, Ripper GC, and Range Goats, plus flashy elements—aimed to revolutionize a tradition-bound sport but often felt gimmicky.
Post-2026 Outlook
Current chief executive Scott O’Neil and the board seek new investors to extend LIV beyond 2026. Without PIF’s scale and willingness to invest heavily, the league cannot replicate its past. Top players will likely thrive elsewhere, while mid-tier talent may anchor a scaled-back version.
The PGA Tour, initially rattled, now stands resilient with stronger logistics, structure, history, and finances despite complications from the rivalry.
Fans Suffer Most
Fans, especially in Australia, South Africa, and emerging markets, lose the most. LIV Adelaide showcased the model’s strengths: massive crowds, compelling narratives, quality golf on a premier course—a vision of a global World Tour that slipped away.
LIV Golf promised “golf, but louder.” It delivered volume but inconsistently matched it with elite competition.

