Rory McIlroy on the Premier Golf League that would threaten PGA Tour, European Tour: ‘I don’t see why anyone would be for it’

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Rory McIlroy’s views on a potential rival golf league that would threaten the PGA Tour and European Tour remain steadfast.

“I’m very much against it. I don’t see why anyone would be for it,” McIlroy said Wednesday ahead of the start of the Well Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow. “You go back to what happened last week in Europe with the European Super League in football. People can see it for what it is, which is a money grab, which is fine if that’s what you’re playing golf for is to make as much money as possible.

“Totally fine, then go and do that if that’s what makes you happy.”

On Tuesday, The Telegraph reported the aspiring breakaway tour backed by Saudi Arabian money has made multi-million dollar offers ranging from $30-$50 million to several of the game’s biggest names and best players, including world No. 1 Dustin Johnson, Phil Mickelson, Adam Scott, Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau, Rickie Fowler and Justin Rose.

“The money is there,” one agent told Golfweek on condition of anonymity. “I heard $1 billion. This is real.” Another agent added, “We’re in the listening stage again. Nothing is concrete.”

The proposed league – whether known as the Premier Golf League or Super Golf League – would feature 40-48 players playing 12-18 events around the world with lucrative purses. The league would have a lot of guaranteed money and include a team concept that would dole out ownership stakes for 10-12 players who would captain four-man teams.

“Maybe the source of the money’s changed or the people that are in charge have changed, but nothing has happened,” said McIlroy, who added that he was first approached about a competing league in 2014. “No sponsorship deals, no media deals, no players have signed up, no manufacturers have signed up. There’s been so many iterations at this point.

“I’m playing this game to try to cement my place in history and to win major championships and to win the biggest tournaments in the world. That’s why I’m playing this game. Golf has been very good to me obviously over the years by playing in Europe starting off, coming over to the PGA Tour and playing here. I honestly don’t think there’s a better structure in place in golf, and I don’t think there will be.”

As the threat of the proposed league mounted, the PGA Tour and European Tour circled the wagons. The two formed a strategic alliance, with the PGA Tour buying an estimated $90 million stake on the European Tour’s media operations.

This year, the PGA Tour also established a $40 million Player Impact Program that would reward 10 players not for their results inside the ropes but their work to promote the game outside the ropes.

That is on top of the roughly $390 million in purses, $60 million in FedEx Cup bonuses, $10 million for the Comcast Business Tour Top 10 bonus and $1 million for the AON Risk Reward bonus. All told, more than $500 million is in the pie this season.

In 2022, a nine-year, $700 million TV deal with NBC and CBS kicks off and will likely boost prize money and bonus money.

“We are aligned with the PGA Tour in opposing, in the strongest possible terms, any proposal for an alternative golf league,” Keith Pelley, chief executive of the European Tour, said in a statement. “Since the launch of our Strategic Alliance last November, our two organizations have been working together to make global golf less fractured and not create further division, with the interests of all players and fans at the forefront of our thinking.”

The PGA Tour did not release a statement, but commissioner Jay Monahan told players in a meeting at Quail Hollow on Tuesday that any player joining the league would face immediate suspension from the PGA Tour and possible expulsion, according to three players who attended the meeting. Presently, the PGA Tour requires players to get releases for conflicting events on other tours, which are limited to about 3-5 per year.

“You have to protect your product, right?” McIlroy said when asked about the immediate suspension and possible expulsion for defecting players. “It’s a competitive threat. And Jay took us through that last night. It’s in the bylaws that were written by the members.

“I just can’t see how it works. I just can’t see how it happens.”

If the league does happen, it’s unknown how the four major championships would handle matters. Or what would happen to the Ryder Cup.

“From the beginning (the league) seemed like something that seems pretty farfetched to actually happen,” world No. 9 Webb Simpson said. “To come in and shake up the way golf’s always been.

“I love the PGA Tour. It’s given me an incredible opportunity these last 12 years of my life. It’s hard for me to believe that the guys will really jump ship and go to a completely different way of golf than we’ve always had.

“Are the best players in the world really going to go to this tour if only eight of the top 25 in the world ranking are going to go? I think as a top player, I want to play against the best. I don’t think throwing X amount of money at guys is as appealing now as it maybe once was because of how great the opportunities we have on the PGA Tour. I’s not that I’m against it, it’s just I’m for the PGA Tour.”

As is world No. 2 Justin Thomas.

“I don’t feel the need to completely up and leave the PGA Tour because not only have they been great to me and everybody else, but we have it pretty good here and I do understand that and respect it,” he said. “I love it out here on the PGA Tour, and we’re very fortunate to get to go to some unbelievable places and play for a lot of money and have an opportunity to grow our brands and grow the game of golf. I’m very content and very happy with everything how it’s going here.”