Answering the key questions and explaining the need-to-know changes ahead of the fourth season of LIV Golf, and the third under the League format, ahead of the Saudi-backed series’ 2025 opener in Riyadh.
While none of LIV’s signings over this winter have been as seismic as Jon Rahm’s was for 2024, the Saudi-backed league have still managed to sign one of the rising stars of the established tours in Northern Ireland’s Tom McKibbin.
McKibbin, the 22-year-old dubbed the ‘next Rory McIlroy’ after hailing from the same Holywood Golf Club as the four-time major champion, has joined Rahm’s Legion XII team – a side which already features Tyrrell Hatton, who was another major 2024 LIV recruit, and 20-year-old Caleb Surratt.
McKibbin is one of six new entrants in the 54-player field for this year.
New Zealand’s Ben Campbell (RangeGoats GC) South Korea’s Jang Yu-bin (Iron Heads GC), Denmark’s Frederik Kjettrup (Cleeks GC) and Spain’s Luis Masaveu (Fireballs GC) have been signed to teams, while Chieh-Po Lee from Chinese Taipei earned his place as a wildcard by winning the LIV Golf Promotions qualifying event.
The LIV Golf League season will again consist of 14 tournaments but this year features six new courses.
It starts on February 6-8 with a new floodlit event in Riyadh after the Saudi Arabian round was moved from its previous home of the Royal Greens Golf & Country Club.
Mexico’s event in April is also being played on a different course – Club Golf de Chapultepec, located just outside Mexico City – while South Korea will stage a tournament for the very first time at the start of May at the Jack Nicklaus Golf Club.
After a year’s absence, LIV will return to Washington DC in June, this time at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Club, with Dallas moved up the schedule to the summer after staging the Team Championship finale in 2024.
The Individual Championship finale will this year conclude at a new venue in The Club at Chatham Hills in Indianapolis on August 15-17, a week before the Team Championship is decided at The Cardinal at Saint John’s course in Michigan.
February 6-8 – LIV Golf Riyadh – Riyadh Golf Club
February 14-16 – LIV Golf Adelaide – The Grange Golf Club
March 7-9 – LIV Golf Hong Kong – Hong Kong Golf Club
March 14-16 – LIV Golf Singapore – Sentosa Golf Club
April 4-6 – LIV Golf Miami – Blue Monster at Trump National Doral
April 25-27 – LIV Golf Mexico City – Club de Golf Chapultepec
May 2-4 – LIV Golf Korea – Jack Nicklaus Golf Club Korea
June 6-8 – LIV Golf Washington DC – Robert Trent Jones Golf Club
June 27-29 – LIV Golf Dallas – Maridoe Golf Club
July 11-13 – LIV Golf Andalucia – Real Club Valderrama
July 25-27 – LIV Golf UK – JCB Golf and Country Club
August 8-10 – LIV Golf Chicago – Bolingbrook Golf Club
August 15-17 – LIV Golf Indianapolis – The Club at Chatham Hills
August 22-24 – Team Championship – LIV Golf Michigan – The Cardinal at Saint John’s Resort
In a significant change at the top of the LIV Golf organisation, Greg Norman has stepped down after three years in the chief executive role.
Norman, the two-time major winner, had been considered one of the most divisive figures in golf’s civil war and, at the height of the tensions between the breakaway series and the established tours in 2022, was heavily criticised and called on to step down by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.
The Australian has been replaced by experienced American executive Scott O’Neil, who comes from a sports and entertainment background having held senior roles at the NBA’s Philadelphia 76ers and, most recently, theme park operator Merlin Entertainments.
Another notable change for LIV in 2025 comes in the form of a multi-year new US TV deal with Fox Sports, while they have signed up leading golf content creator Rick Shiels as an ambassador. There have also been notable commercial deals elsewhere, including Rahm and his Legion XII side striking an agreement with clothing brand Greyson.
Rahm, the 2023 Masters and 2021 US Open champion, returns for his second season after winning the Individual Championship and topping the money list in his debut campaign. Hatton again features in his Legion XII line-up.
Former major winners Phil Mickelson, Cameron Smith, Dustin Johnson, Bubba Watson, Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau – whose Crushers GC side won the 2024 Teams Championship – all return for the new season too.
Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood, Martin Kaymer and Paul Casey are the other experienced names who remain an established part of the LIV set-up.
Mickelson will be absent from the Riyadh opener due to a shoulder injury but is expected to return at the following event in Adelaide. He is being replaced in the Saudi field by reserve player Ollie Schniederjans, who won his maiden Asian Tour tournament at the start of February.
It’s now more than a year since the targeted date of New Year’s Eve 2023 came and went without a deal being announced between LIV’s backers – the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund – the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour to formalise the Framework Agreement to unite golf which was unexpectedly announced in June of that year.
Despite plenty of reports since then suggesting that a resolution to the talks was imminent, there has still been no final breakthrough with the discussions between the key players behind closed doors continuing into 2025.
But there have still been plenty of examples over the past year to show that relations between the parties have thawed substantially since the early hostilities seen across the game that accompanied LIV’s launch and subsequent big-money signing spree.
One-time arch critic McIlroy has spoken about the benefits of a deal, while PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan even played a round of golf alongside PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship.
However, as yet, no final deal and agreed plan forward is in place.
Each LIV Golf event is played across three days, which means tournaments are 54 holes in length. There is no cut.
Fields comprise 54 players – 52 of which are attached to one of the 13 teams, while there are two wildcards (which this year are Chieh-Po Lee and the returning Anthony Kim) – with each day getting under way via a shotgun start which sees players tee off at the same time in groups across all 18 holes.
There is an individual and team winner of each event. Points for finishing positions are awarded and count towards the overall season-long Individual and Team Championships.
The individual winner of each tournament is decided by the lowest score at the end of the third day.
For the first time in LIV Golf’s history, every player’s score in every round will count toward his team’s total score in the team competition at each regular season tournament.
The Individual Championship is determined by points collected by players through the first 13 events of the year. The top 24 finishers earn points on a sliding scale at each event, with the tournament winner gaining 40, second place taking home 30 and third awarded 24. The player with the most points after round 13 ends up as champion.
Only the top 24 players in the season-long standings are guaranteed their 2026 spot in the league, with those finishing between 25th and 48th – providing they’re out of contract – then needing to either be re-signed by their team or picked by another.
Those 49th and below will be relegated out of the league and need to enter the 2024 LIV Golf Promotions tournament, which will take place later in the year.
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For the Teams Championship, only the top-eight teams in each tournament earn points, with 32 given to the winning side.
One of the teams will also fail to qualify for the season-ending Team Championship, with seeding in place for the 12 teams who make it through. The team in 13th place will not compete but will still attend. The top 12 teams following the 13th regular season event will be seeded. The team that finishes in 13th place will not compete but will still attend.
While defectors from the established tours remain barred from playing on the PGA Tour, the PGA of America has confirmed that they can feature on the US Ryder Cup team at Bethpage Black in New York in September.
Any American player who qualifies through the Ryder Cup points system or is granted a wildcard pick by captain Keegan Bradley is eligible.
European players can also feature on Luke Donald’s side provided they have retained membership of the DP World Tour and played in four tour events a season, in addition to paying all fines and serving any bans associated with their LIV move.
Rahm and Hatton have both appealed against their fines for appearing at LIV events, with a date for hearings yet to be set, so they remain in strong contention to feature in Donald’s side.
After admitting defeat last year in their bid to get world ranking points awarded for their tournaments after being rebuffed by the Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) organisation, LIV players only currently earn points when they play in majors – if they’re eligible or hold an exemption – on the DP World Tour if they fulfil certain criteria, or via appearing on other satellite tours.
Rahm, for instance, has slipped from third to 43rd in the rankings since defecting to LIV, having played in only eight ranking-counting tournaments since – three majors, the Paris Olympics and four DP World Tour events.
As of February 2025, Hatton is the highest-rank LIV player in the OWGR in eighth place.
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