Axios Sports: 1 big thing: ⛳️ The fall of Phil

BleedGopher

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per Axios Sports:

The Saudi-backed golf tour once felt like a legitimate threat to the PGA Tour. It now appears dead on arrival, and one of the biggest names attached to it may never recover.

Driving the news: The proposed tour, funded by the Saudi royal family and run by Greg Norman, has been making waves for months. But most Americans first heard about it last week, when comments Phil Mickelson made to golf writer Alan Shipnuck made headlines.

"They're scary motherf--kers to get involved with ... We know they killed [Washington Post reporter Jamal] Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights. They execute people over there for being gay. Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reshape how the PGA Tour operates."
— Phil Mickelson
The aftermath: Rory McIlroy blasted Mickelson, saying his comments were "naive, selfish, egotistical, ignorant." Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau — the two biggest stars vaguely attached to the project — publicly backed out, declaring their allegiance to the PGA Tour.

  • Mickelson issued an apology on Tuesday, but the damage had already been done. KPMG, which has sponsored him since 2008, ended the relationship. Amstel Light also cut ties with the 51-year-old.
  • Of note: Mickelson ranks eighth among the world's highest-paid athletes in terms of endorsements, raking in $42 million last year alone, per Sportico (subscription).
The big picture: The Saudi-backed tour may still have a future, but it's hard to imagine top players — once rumored to be interested — risking their PGA Tour status and sponsorship deals to join such a toxic project.

  • If the tour does flame out, it would be mark the second failed breakaway league in the past 10 months, joining the European Super League (soccer) that collapsed in April.
  • "Who's left to go?" said McIlroy over the weekend. "I just can't see any reason why anyone would go."
What to watch: Mickelson could be suspended, or even banned, from the PGA Tour for directly supporting the rival league. In addition to his regrettable comments about the Saudis, Mickelson also told Shipnuck he and three other top players helped draw up an operating plan.

The last word: It's unclear whether Mickelson was chasing money or using the Saudi league as leverage to change the PGA Tour — perhaps a bit of both. What is clear is that his reputation and legacy are now in peril.

"The last amateur to win on the PGA Tour. The leap when he finally won his first major. [Winning] his sixth at age 50. ... Mickelson had it all — the adoration, the wealth. With his most daring and audacious play for control, [he] might only be able to salvage the latter at a great cost."

Go Tom Lehman!!
 

Phil and Tiger have some remarkable similarities. Both were very charismatic publicly and equally reckless (in their own ways) in their private lives. Phil with his gambling and Tiger with his drugs, women, driving, etc.
 

So is he being blasted because he considered playing over there even with all those terrible things going on? Or because he brought them up to begin with?
 


So is he being blasted because he considered playing over there even with all those terrible things going on? Or because he brought them up to begin with?
Yeah, in a sense this seems like he was just the one who said the quiet part loud. You see there were other names who were going to play and Greg Norman is/was going to run it. If anything Mickelson was just more honest about it all.
 





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