QUINIX Sport News: Though White House meeting was a ‘huge step,’ Jay Monahan doesn’t expect a PGA Tour-LIV Golf deal soon

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The PGA Tour commissioner said Tuesday that he doesn’t expect to announce a deal between the two leagues in the next few weeks.

While it’s seemed as if there has been momentum all around, including at the White House, there won’t be a deal between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf anytime soon.

PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan spoke with reporters Tuesday at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, and he didn’t have much of an update. There is no meeting on the books with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, and Monahan said he doesn’t expect to announce their partnership deal next week at The Players Championship — where he traditionally gives a state of the Tour address.

“We don’t have a next meeting set, but obviously we’re in a really busy stretch here,” Monahan said, via Golfweek. “We’ve got Arnold Palmer Invitational, Players. They have got two events here in the next two weeks. So it doesn’t mean there won’t be conversations, there’s just not a physical meeting set up.”

The Tour and the PIF have been negotiating the terms of their partnership for nearly two years now. Those talks, which came after years of heated battle between the two leagues, have seemingly heated up in recent months — especially when Monahan and Adam Scott met with President Donald Trump about the negotiations at the White House last month. Monahan said after that meeting that “everything is moving forward with pace.”

Tiger Woods participated in a second meeting, too, and he golfed with the president before Trump flew to New Orleans to attend Super Bowl LIX.

While Monahan said Tuesday that a deal isn’t imminent, he insists that things are still moving on the right track despite both a lack of progress and rumors to the contrary. Meeting with Trump at the White House, he said, was a “huge step.”

“I think anything that I’ve said or we said, the three of us said is consistent with what should be said when you’re in the middle of a complex discussion to try and reunify the game of golf,” Monahan said. “It doesn’t speak to my confidence level, it speaks to the moment. I view that meeting as a huge step and so I look at that very positively.”

 

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