Lou D. -
The general tenor on this board is that PGA Tour pros are a pampered and spoiled bunch. Based on your comments, one might get the impression you think they are not spoiled and pampered enough.
DT
Not sure that I'm an outlier, but there does seem to be a pattern.
I like PGA Tour golf a lot, and its composition of players, young, old and in between, from throughout the world. As a group, in comparison to other sports, artistic endeavors, and most professional stations, I think that they comport themselves well above average.
My attention to this whole matter has more to do with Phil's misstep originally, and how his position vis-a-vis who controls and benefits from the players' images and content seems to have been turned into something more insidious and personal. I am unaware that he was demanding a higher distribution of purses and other means of compensation based on performance. If he was, so near the end of his PGA Tour career, the benefits mostly inure to his successors. And while I believe that it takes all the players to make the Show successful, there is some merit to matching rewards in line with the 80/20 principle (Pareto).
I am less impressed with the Tour bureaucracy, its substantial "retained earnings", and what appears to be a lack of transparency in its financial structure (one of the things that impresses me about our club is the complete, detailed, audited financial statements we get each year- sunlight is a great disinfectant). I am sure that there are good reasons for its opaque structure; I just don't know that it benefits its broad membership or the consumer.
Now, one may ask, how is this any of my business. Well, the Tour operates as a non-profit, exempted from paying all sorts of taxes that even some charities can't escape (see linked article below). It also relies on thousands of unpaid volunteers to operate its events. I've worked several tournaments as a volunteer out of my own freewill. I'd like to see a better utilization of its proceeds outside the bureaucracy and a more competitive environment where its players, without being coerced, will choose to play most of its tournaments because the compensation is more commensurate with the quality of play.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/monteburke/2013/05/08/the-pga-tour-a-not-for-profit-money-machine/?sh=5b9f99de5733