Who cares?
Let the market decide....meaning US the viewers.
If the LIV tour sucks ass (like the USFL, WHL and ABA before that), then they crap out and investors/backers lose and the players who participated must deal with the fall out as they are gown-ass-men!
However, if "we the people" actually enjoy the product they are attempting to sell us - just like the PGA Tour sells us a product - then how is that a bad thing?
Sounds to me like the PGA Tour seeks to stifle competition and nothing could be more 1) un-American and 2) anti-capitalist.
How terrifying! Ian M and I agreeing entirely on something.
As much as Milton Friedman feared a large, dominant central government, he was just as concerned with companies and organizations in cahoots with institutions that had the power to compel. There are far more crony capitalists than players in commerce which are willing to participate on a level playing field; many more rent-seekers than those who compete on the basis of superior products and value.
The PGA Tour split from the PGA in the late 1960s for reasons to do with reaping the benefits of their work. I identify with that sentiment. Competition does make most of us better, albeit not without some pain.
We see throughout the internet the monetization of golf by those who may love the game, but aren't able to make a living at it with their sticks. The Tour financials posted here were eye-opening- some $1 Billion in fairly liquid assets beyond pension obligations. Yet, a journeyman out because of injury with some 70 cuts made enjoys pension benefits of $0.
If the PGA Tour model works so well, why fear a bit of competition? Creative destruction is a key principle in our market economy, so long as it is another's destruction that benefits us. Not so sporting are we?
David Tepper,
I can see a large organization with considerable market power claim that the employee signed the conditions of employment with his own freewill and no matter how onerous, the court will hold him to the T of that agreement. While Golf and pro golfers may not get a sympathetic ear from government, the independent contractor/employee issue has received a lot of attention by Democrats and perhaps the Tour might find a way to accommodate some releases to avoid prolonged litigation.
A while ago the Tour instituted a policy that required Tour members to play X number of events annually (15, I think) to retain their status. It also had guidance on rotating tournaments so that the marquee players would be in a given field every three to five years (I don't know if this is accurate or still in effect). Anyways, it seems that some accommodations in this direction might be made, though I can see the resistance, to competition.