The PGA Tour isn’t ready to start thinking about poaching quite yet.
Brian Rolapp, the Tour’s new CEO, had a cautious response on Wednesday when asked about the chaotic circumstances around their chief competitor, LIV Golf.
There were reports swirling all day that the rebel golf league could fold — perhaps even before this week’s tournament in Mexico City teed off on Thursday afternoon — with the possibility of Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) pulling its financial backing.
“I’m interested in doing whatever makes the PGA Tour better,” Rolapp told Trey Wingo on his podcast.

“Fans want the best players playing together. Having said that, I don’t know what the circumstances are. Once there’s clarity, we’ll cross that bridge when we get there.”
It appears for now the LIV Golf season will go on as planned. Their own CEO, Scott O’Neil, sent a letter to staff claiming that the reports by multiple reputable outlets were misleading.
“I want to be crystal clear: Our season continues exactly as planned, uninterrupted and at full throttle,” O’Neil wrote.
“While the media landscape is often filled with speculation, our reality is defined by the work we do on the grass. We are heading into the heart of our 2026 schedule with the full energy of an organization that is bigger, louder, and more influential than ever before. The life of a startup movement is often defined by these moments of pressure. We signed up for this because we believe in disrupting the status quo.
“We have faced headwinds since the jump, and we’ve answered every time with resilience and grace. Now, we answer by doing what we do best: putting on the most compelling show in sports.”

PIF has financed the leaugue since it was launched in 2022 and swiped some of the top players from the PGA Tour — including Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau and Jon Rahm — with massive guaranteed contracts.
Koepka came back to the PGA Tour this season — thanks to a limited exemption for recent major champions that is now closed — and Patrick Reed is returning in August, thanks to a different pathway that includes sitting out a year from his most recent LIV event.
Koepka had to donate $5 million to charities as part of his return deal and accepted “a five-year forfeiture of potential equity in the PGA Tour’s Player Equity Program” that could cost him up to $85 million.
If LIV does ultimately fold, the most pressing question for Rolapp will be about letting the golfers who abandoned the PGA back on the tour. How much time must be spent in golf purgatory? How much will it cost them to return after they lined their pockets with rich Saudi paychecks?
That was not something Rolapp was ready to entertain on Wednesday as he and the rest of the golf world waits to see how the LIV drama plays out this season.


