Major twist as Greg Norman kept in dark about shock LIV Golf, PGA Tour merger until very last second

Major twist as Greg Norman kept in dark about shock LIV Golf, PGA Tour merger until very last second

Even Greg Norman was out of the loop on Wednesday’s (AEST) stunning PGA Tour-LIV Golf merger.

Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the governor of the Saudi Public Investment Fund who will be the chairman of the new combined megatour, told CNBC Tuesday morning that he phoned Norman, the LIV Golf CEO, right before his television appearance.

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“He is aware. I made a call just before this,” Al-Rumayyan said on CNBC.

“Of course, he’s a partner with us. All the stakeholders with us had a call right before this interview.”

The Golf Channel also reported that Norman was not involved in the merger negotiations between LIV and the PGA Tour.

Norman has been one of the central figures of the PGA-LIV war, taking shots at PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan amid antitrust litigation between the Tour and the Saudi-backed league, while also ribbing players like Rory McIlroy.

Norman wrote a letter to Monahan last year after the Tour commissioner said defectors to LIV Golf would be banned from playing on the PGA Tour, which ended with, “this is just the beginning. It certainly is not the end.”

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Norman had no idea about the LIV-PGA merger until the last moment. (Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images)Source: Getty Images

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McIlroy and Tiger Woods both called for Norman’s ouster as LIV Golf CEO in November as the first step toward a détente.

“Greg’s got to leave and then we can eventually, hopefully, have a stay between the two lawsuits and figure something out,” Woods said at the Hero World Challenge on Nov. 29.

“But why would you change anything if you’ve got a lawsuit against you? They sued us first.”

In an interview with The Post’s Mark Cannizzaro last July, Norman said he wanted to ultimately work with the PGA Tour.

“We have no intention to try to destroy the PGA Tour,” Norman said.

“Every step of the way we’ve built our model to work within the ecosystem and give everybody the opportunity to work within that ecosystem. It’s pro golf. There’s such a simple solution, it’s ridiculous. I can’t talk about it, because it’s a process we’ve gone through with our legal team knowing everything that’s in the rules and regulations. But it’s not a hard fix, it’s really not. And the longer they do it (suspend players), the less we’re worried about it because we have more people coming in and wanting to invest.”

This story originally appeared on the New York Post and has been reposted with permission