SSPS NEWSY EDITOR/AUTHOR: MR.PACYSUNNYSYNCLER
2 min read
05 Jul
05Jul




The framework agreement for the PGA Tour and LIV Golf to unify may be stalled, but there’s still anticipation that one day players from the two tours will compete against each other again outside of the major championships.

Mr.Lucas Glover, though, doesn’t necessarily want that to happen. 


“I don’t want to play with them, me personally,” Glover, the 2009 U.S. Open champion, said on his SiriusXM show this week. “I don’t think they should be back here (for the PGA Tour). I don’t want them here. They made their decision. I don’t blame any of them. They made a decision, I don’t care, but they also went away from this tour and chose to. 
“inspite a PGA Tour player and somebody that dreamed of playing (Participating) at the PGA Tour, and have poured my heart and soul into this Tour and game for 21 seasons now, I don’t want somebody that chose another path and a path of least, or, less resistance.”




 Stalled negotiations have led to a stalemate in reunification talks in men’s pro Golf
 Lucas Glover says he’s “having a hard time with it" and grapples with the different perspectives on what's next for the PGA TOUR for "The Lucas Glover Show:"
    📻: https://t.co/ix9AQeOgcV pic.twitter.com/jn9YaGRIdN    — SiriusXM PGA TOUR Radio (@SiriusXMPGATOUR) July 3, 2025.



Even with talks of the two leagues making a deal, there’s chatter that players may be able to return to the PGA Tour after their LIV deals expire. And this year, some players who have been relegated from LIV have earned starts of the PGA Tour. 


Many of the game’s most well-known players, such as Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson, and Cam Smith, have left the PGA Tour for the Saudi-backed circuit after its inception in 2022.




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