‘They didn’t listen to the players’: Patrick Reed and Pat Perez blame PGA Tour for LIV Golf switch

The pair will tee it up at the second event of the controversial series this week in Oregon

Amy Tennery
Wednesday 29 June 2022 04:39 EDT
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Reed will tee it up at the second event of the controversial series this week in Oregon
Reed will tee it up at the second event of the controversial series this week in Oregon (Getty Images)

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Patrick Reed and Pat Perez believe the PGA Tour only has itself to blame for losing players to LIV Golf, ahead of the series’ second tournament at Oregon’s Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club this week.

Sitting alongside four-times major winner Brooks Koepka, Perez and 2018 Masters winner Reed ripped into the PGA Tour and its commissioner, Jay Monahan, and said the blame for their departure lay at the feet of the golf organizing body.

“Monahan just shut it out from the start. Didn’t want to listen, didn’t want to take a meeting,” said Perez, a 46-year-old, three-time PGA Tour winner.

“They didn’t listen to the players. Somehow, the tour, they keep talking about ‘Oh yeah, we work for you, we work for the players.’ But it’s the opposite. Seems like we work for them. We don’t have a say in anything.”

Earlier this month, the PGA Tour suspended members who joined LIV Golf, with Monahan saying they had “decided to turn their backs” on the tour.

Asked if the tour could have done anything to keep them, Reed responded: “Listen to the players for once.

“We should be able to do whatever we want, we’re independent contractors,” said Perez.

LIV Golf participants have faced a barrage of criticism from fans and fellow golfers over Saudi Arabia’s human rights record.

Saudi Arabia’s government denies accusations of human rights abuses.

“This group has provided me an opportunity to play golf and have a different schedule,” said Perez. “That’s my only concern.”

With Portland the second of eight events that will offer up purses totaling $255 million, LIV promises its competitors more money with far fewer tournaments on the calendar.

Perez said at his age, after decades on the road missing time with his family, getting the call from LIV was like “winning the lottery”.

“I’m a 30- to 33-week guy every year I’ve done it,” he said. “And now I don’t have to.”

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