There’s not much happening. That’s the update from Adam Scott — one of golf’s most respected voices and a PGA Tour policy board member — when asked this week about the progress on PGA Tour–LIV Golf reunification efforts.
Scott, who played a direct role in earlier negotiations, confirmed what most insiders have suspected: the talks have stalled. Speaking from the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, North Carolina, Scott delivered a blunt but unsurprising assessment of the state of the high-stakes talks between the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), which backs LIV Golf.
Stalled Talks After White House Meeting
Earlier optimism surrounded the PGA-LIV merger framework announced in June 2023. Hopes were further raised when a White House meeting in February brought together President Donald Trump, PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan, Tiger Woods, Adam Scott, and PIF Governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan.
The meeting was expected to help accelerate a deal that would include a $1.5 billion investment from PIF into PGA Tour Enterprises. But Scott says that meeting didn’t deliver on that promise.
“There’s not much happening,” Scott told reporters Wednesday. “I don’t know if more White House visits are really necessary. It was really quite an experience, I have to say. Those conversations haven’t advanced far from there.”
Brian Rolapp as New PGA Tour CEO
With negotiations at a standstill, the future now rests largely in the hands of Brian Rolapp, the newly appointed CEO of PGA Tour Enterprises. Rolapp, a longtime NFL executive with a reputation for navigating complicated broadcast and business partnerships, began his new role on Monday.
“With Brian stepping in, a lot of that’s going to fall onto his desk now,” Scott said. “I think he needs some time to get up to speed and understand what’s going on.”
Scott praised Rolapp’s demeanor, calling it “calm” and well-suited for navigating what’s become the most turbulent period in professional golf’s modern era.
No Deal, No Deadline, No Movement
Scott’s tone reflected the broader sentiment around professional golf at the moment: the future is unclear. Tensions between the PGA Tour and LIV remain, and no new meetings between the two sides have been reported since February.
For now, all eyes turn to Rolapp. But with PGA Tour players and LIV Golf stars still entrenched in separate ecosystems, any hope of a true unification appears frozen — at least in the short term.
For Scott there’s a more immediate concern: making the playoffs. He is currently 85th in the FedEx Cup standings. “It’s do or die,” he said with a smile. “Sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking there’s always next week — not this time.”
So while the business of golf remains stuck in limbo, the game itself moves on, with players like Scott still grinding — even as golf’s power brokers stall at the negotiating table.