LIV Golf isn’t ending because of ratings, competition, or even its business model.
It’s ending because of something much bigger.
In this episode, Trey Wingo breaks down the real reason behind LIV Golf’s impending shutdown — and why the decision ultimately had nothing to do with golf itself. While many have pointed to television deals, player movement, or long-term sustainability, the reality sits at a much higher level.
This was a top-down decision.
Funded through 2030 by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), LIV Golf had no immediate financial pressure to operate as a traditional business. The league was never built to generate profit — it was designed as a strategic tool. But as global conditions shifted, so did priorities.
At the center of that shift: geopolitics and money.
As Trey explains, the broader economic pressures facing Saudi Arabia — including constraints around oil distribution and changing global dynamics — forced leadership to reevaluate where capital is deployed. And when that happens, even a multi-billion dollar sports experiment becomes expendable.
This also reframes everything we’ve been seeing:
Phil Mickelson stepping away from competition
Bryson DeChambeau’s emotional moments
Jon Rahm’s comments about his own performance
Visible frustration from players like Sergio Garcia
Through this new lens, those moments don’t feel random — they feel connected.
They were signals.
In this breakdown, Trey walks through:
Why LIV Golf was never a traditional business play
The role of MBS and the PIF in the league’s future
How global economic pressure changed everything
What this means for the PGA Tour and the future of professional golf
And why “follow the money” remains the most important rule in understanding sports
This isn’t just about LIV Golf.
It’s about how money, power, and global strategy shape the entire sports landscape. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com
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