Bryson DeChambeau: If LIV Golf fails I’ll prioritise YouTube channel over potential PGA Tour return | Golf News

📂 Categoría: News Story | 📅 Fecha: 1778050174

🔍 En este artículo:

Bryson DeChambeau says he will prioritise his YouTube channel if LIV Golf fails over a potential return to the PGA Tour.

Last week, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) announced it would be cutting its funding to the breakaway golf league following the conclusion of the 2026 season.

In a statement released on Thursday, the PIF said the “substantial investment required is no longer consistent, with the fund’s investment strategy moving forward.”

As one of LIV Golf’s biggest stars – along with Spain’s Jon Rahm, who reached a resolution with the DP World Tour on Tuesday to pay all of his outstanding fines as part of an agreement to return to play on the circuit – DeChambeau’s future is now one of great interest.

“I think, from my perspective, I’d love to grow my YouTube channel three times, maybe even more,” DeChambeau said, who has 2.69m subscribers on YouTube, told ESPN.

LIV CEO breaks silence on DeChambeau contract talks

Ahead of LIV Golf Virginia, CEO Scott O’Neil was asked whether the league would seek to reach an agreement with Bryson DeChambeau on his contract, before taking the business to investors.

“That’s an interesting question. I’m not sure,” he said. “We’ll sort through and work through. Like, I appreciate it, I appreciate the question. It’s just Bryson’s special.

“He’s different and special. You want to talk about a business partner, we’re literally talking about the future of LIV Golf, I’m talking with him about how he sees, not just the golf, but the business? He’s smart, he’s driven, he’s committed, and he’s a heck of a partner.”

“I would love to. I’d love to do a bunch of dubbing in different languages, giving the world more reason to watch YouTube. And then I’d love to play tournaments that want me.

“The egos need to get dropped. Everybody needs to come in with a level-headed playing field, with an opportunistic mindset to grow the game of golf. That’s why I came over here. That’s why I do what I do on YouTube.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Sky Sports’ Jamie Weir explains the background to Jon Rahm’s return to the DP World Tour, what it means for LIV Golf and are we likely to see him on the PGA Tour as well?

Of potential punishments and fines to re-join the PGA Tour, DeChambeau added: “It’s quite unfortunate in my opinion, considering what I could do for them.”

The 32-year-old also admitted the announcement from Saudi Arabia came as a great surprise to him, especially considering he was led to believe LIV Golf would be financed for another six years until 2032.

“I was completely shocked,” DeChambeau said. “I didn’t expect it to happen. A couple months before that, it’s like: ‘We’re here until 2032. We’ve got financing until 2032,’ and so I told everybody, and that’s what I was told.

“And then, you know, I haven’t had any communication. And unfortunately, things are moving on in a different direction. Obviously, they wanted to move on.

Image:
Yasir Al-Rumayyan of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) announced it would be cutting its funding of LIV Gold after 2026 season

“If we have a great business model and they’re [PGA Tour, DP World Tour] very interested in combining forces, that’s the Kumbaya moment, right?

“So, it’s our job to come up with a better business plan on the [top company] side. The team franchises, there’s enough making profit now to where we could sell them for close to $200m (£147m), and that’s not talking about my team either.

“I think it requires a little bit of everybody kind of just lowering their guards and all coming together and going: ‘OK, what’s best for the game of golf?'”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Eamon Lynch tells Golf Today on the Golf Channel that a return to the PGA Tour for Rahm or DeChambeau will prove to be very difficult for the pair

DeChambeau won the 2023 US Open, meaning he has an exemption there until 2033. Yet, he is only guaranteed entries to The Masters, The Open and The PGA until 2028.

The California-native, whose LIV Golf contract ends after this season, also said he’s confident LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil will attract new investors.

“There’s a few different models,” he said. “Look, the [PGA Tour] isn’t doing great either. Let’s be honest about the situation.

“They’ve got the media. They’ve got everybody on the side that helps pump it up. But they’re reducing field sizes, cutting employees and restructuring their business too.

Of the potential for his LIV Golf contract being paid out or not, DeChambeau said: “Your guess is as good as mine.”

‘There will be some form of a road for a lot of these guys’

Speaking to the Sky Sports Golf Podcast, PGA Tour and DP World Tour player Billy Horschel said:

“If you have a price and that person doesn’t agree, and then they come back. That offer is not still on the table; that offer is going to change a bit.

“I would think going forward with those three players, if they do offer something, it’s going to be a different offer. I think when it pertains to the other players, I don’t think anyone else has PGA Tour Eligibility access. So I don’t know what’s going to happen. There will be some form of a road for a lot of these guys.

“Some of these guys may not have a road. I don’t see a road for Phil Mickelson back to the PGA Tour, even though he’s a lifetime member of the PGA Tour and he’s done a lot and there is a lot of stuff that he said he did. There were certain things behind the scenes that he said he did and certain things behind the scenes before LIV came out, and I don’t think it’s going to work out for him. And rightfully, I don’t think he wants to even come back to the PGA Tour or even the Champions Tour.

“It’s going to be nice that when all this is all said and done, there is not this sort of bickering back-and-forth. I’m all for competition; it breeds a sense that you have to make changes to be better. You have to be innovative, you’ve got to do things to still be the top dog in professional golf.

“Going forward, it is going to be nice to have the players who want to get back to playing PGA Tour golf, the guys that want to be back playing on the DP World Tour, under one big umbrella, is somewhat harmonious.”

Watch the Ryder Cup live next September on Sky Sports Golf. Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW.

Get the best prices and book a round at one of 1,700 courses across the UK & Ireland

Get the best prices and book a round at one of 1,700 courses across the UK & Ireland

Bryson DeChambeau says he will prioritise his YouTube channel if LIV Golf fails over a potential return to the PGA Tour.

Last week, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) announced it would be cutting its funding to the breakaway golf league following the conclusion of the 2026 season.

In a statement released on Thursday, the PIF said the “substantial investment required is no longer consistent, with the fund’s investment strategy moving forward.”

As one of LIV Golf’s biggest stars – along with Spain’s Jon Rahm, who reached a resolution with the DP World Tour on Tuesday to pay all of his outstanding fines as part of an agreement to return to play on the circuit – DeChambeau’s future is now one of great interest.

“I think, from my perspective, I’d love to grow my YouTube channel three times, maybe even more,” DeChambeau said, who has 2.69m subscribers on YouTube, told ESPN.

LIV CEO breaks silence on DeChambeau contract talks

Ahead of LIV Golf Virginia, CEO Scott O’Neil was asked whether the league would seek to reach an agreement with Bryson DeChambeau on his contract, before taking the business to investors.

“That’s an interesting question. I’m not sure,” he said. “We’ll sort through and work through. Like, I appreciate it, I appreciate the question. It’s just Bryson’s special.

“He’s different and special. You want to talk about a business partner, we’re literally talking about the future of LIV Golf, I’m talking with him about how he sees, not just the golf, but the business? He’s smart, he’s driven, he’s committed, and he’s a heck of a partner.”

“I would love to. I’d love to do a bunch of dubbing in different languages, giving the world more reason to watch YouTube. And then I’d love to play tournaments that want me.

“The egos need to get dropped. Everybody needs to come in with a level-headed playing field, with an opportunistic mindset to grow the game of golf. That’s why I came over here. That’s why I do what I do on YouTube.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Sky Sports’ Jamie Weir explains the background to Jon Rahm’s return to the DP World Tour, what it means for LIV Golf and are we likely to see him on the PGA Tour as well?

Of potential punishments and fines to re-join the PGA Tour, DeChambeau added: “It’s quite unfortunate in my opinion, considering what I could do for them.”

The 32-year-old also admitted the announcement from Saudi Arabia came as a great surprise to him, especially considering he was led to believe LIV Golf would be financed for another six years until 2032.

“I was completely shocked,” DeChambeau said. “I didn’t expect it to happen. A couple months before that, it’s like: ‘We’re here until 2032. We’ve got financing until 2032,’ and so I told everybody, and that’s what I was told.

“And then, you know, I haven’t had any communication. And unfortunately, things are moving on in a different direction. Obviously, they wanted to move on.

Image:
Yasir Al-Rumayyan of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) announced it would be cutting its funding of LIV Gold after 2026 season

“If we have a great business model and they’re [PGA Tour, DP World Tour] very interested in combining forces, that’s the Kumbaya moment, right?

“So, it’s our job to come up with a better business plan on the [top company] side. The team franchises, there’s enough making profit now to where we could sell them for close to $200m (£147m), and that’s not talking about my team either.

“I think it requires a little bit of everybody kind of just lowering their guards and all coming together and going: ‘OK, what’s best for the game of golf?'”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Eamon Lynch tells Golf Today on the Golf Channel that a return to the PGA Tour for Rahm or DeChambeau will prove to be very difficult for the pair

DeChambeau won the 2023 US Open, meaning he has an exemption there until 2033. Yet, he is only guaranteed entries to The Masters, The Open and The PGA until 2028.

The California-native, whose LIV Golf contract ends after this season, also said he’s confident LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil will attract new investors.

“There’s a few different models,” he said. “Look, the [PGA Tour] isn’t doing great either. Let’s be honest about the situation.

“They’ve got the media. They’ve got everybody on the side that helps pump it up. But they’re reducing field sizes, cutting employees and restructuring their business too.

Of the potential for his LIV Golf contract being paid out or not, DeChambeau said: “Your guess is as good as mine.”

‘There will be some form of a road for a lot of these guys’

Speaking to the Sky Sports Golf Podcast, PGA Tour and DP World Tour player Billy Horschel said:

“If you have a price and that person doesn’t agree, and then they come back. That offer is not still on the table; that offer is going to change a bit.

“I would think going forward with those three players, if they do offer something, it’s going to be a different offer. I think when it pertains to the other players, I don’t think anyone else has PGA Tour Eligibility access. So I don’t know what’s going to happen. There will be some form of a road for a lot of these guys.

“Some of these guys may not have a road. I don’t see a road for Phil Mickelson back to the PGA Tour, even though he’s a lifetime member of the PGA Tour and he’s done a lot and there is a lot of stuff that he said he did. There were certain things behind the scenes that he said he did and certain things behind the scenes before LIV came out, and I don’t think it’s going to work out for him. And rightfully, I don’t think he wants to even come back to the PGA Tour or even the Champions Tour.

“It’s going to be nice that when all this is all said and done, there is not this sort of bickering back-and-forth. I’m all for competition; it breeds a sense that you have to make changes to be better. You have to be innovative, you’ve got to do things to still be the top dog in professional golf.

“Going forward, it is going to be nice to have the players who want to get back to playing PGA Tour golf, the guys that want to be back playing on the DP World Tour, under one big umbrella, is somewhat harmonious.”

Watch the Ryder Cup live next September on Sky Sports Golf. Not got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with no contract on NOW.

Get the best prices and book a round at one of 1,700 courses across the UK & Ireland

Get the best prices and book a round at one of 1,700 courses across the UK & Ireland

💡 Puntos Clave

  • Este artículo cubre aspectos importantes sobre News Story
  • Información verificada y traducida de fuente confiable
  • Contenido actualizado y relevante para nuestra audiencia

📚 Información de la Fuente

📰 Publicación: www.skysports.com
✍️ Autor:
📅 Fecha Original: 2026-05-06 05:50:00
🔗 Enlace: Ver artículo original

Nota de transparencia: Este artículo ha sido traducido y adaptado del inglés al español para facilitar su comprensión. El contenido se mantiene fiel a la fuente original, disponible en el enlace proporcionado arriba.

📬 ¿Te gustó este artículo?

Tu opinión es importante para nosotros. Comparte tus comentarios o suscríbete para recibir más contenido histórico de calidad.

💬 Dejar un comentario