In a move that’s already stirring up headlines and conversation across the golf world, England’s Laurie Canter has officially declined a spot on the prestigious PGA Tour to rejoin the LIV Golf League for the 2026 season. It’s a decision that underscores just how rapidly the landscape of professional golf is shifting and how deep the LIV project’s roots have grown in the sport.
A Clear Path to the PGA Tour Declined
Canter, now 36, had every reason to embrace the traditional pathway. After a strong 2025 campaign on the DP World Tour, he finished seventh in the Race to Dubai standings, a position that earned him direct access to the PGA Tour. For many players, this is the holy grail: the opportunity to compete weekly against the deepest fields in golf, on the biggest stages, with legacy and tradition at the forefront.
But Canter, never one to follow a prescribed script, has chosen otherwise. He’s heading back to LIV Golf, where he competed from 2022 to 2024, and will once again suit up for Majesticks GC, one of the league’s original teams, co-founded by Ian Poulter, Lee Westwood, and Henrik Stenson. This is more than a return; it’s a statement.
LIV’s Rising Credibility Wins Out
“The league’s growth has been remarkable,” Canter said in a statement, and it’s hard to argue with him. LIV has gone from curiosity to contender, increasingly attracting both established stars and emerging talent, while building a team-centric identity that’s reshaping how fans engage with the game. The format may still be controversial in some circles, but it’s undeniably compelling for many players, offering lucrative contracts, guaranteed starts, and a new rhythm to professional competition.
It’s also worth noting how much Canter has evolved during this period. Since his first stint with LIV, he’s not only become a more consistent force but a proven winner, claiming the 2024 European Open and the 2025 Bahrain Championship. His performance at the 2025 Players Championship, where he became the first former LIV player to tee it up in a PGA Tour-only event, symbolised a thaw in golf’s fractured ecosystem. And yet, even with that symbolic milestone behind him, Canter has chosen to chart a different course.
Majesticks GC: A Familiar Fit for a Transformed Player
His return to Majesticks GC feels almost poetic. A player whose game has matured in parallel with the league’s own evolution is now rejoining a squad that values “excellence, ambition, and identity”, words that mirror the arc of his own career.
The bigger question now? Whether Canter’s decision will inspire more players to follow his lead, or whether he’s simply blazing a personal trail in a sport that’s still figuring out how to reconcile its past with its future. Either way, 2026 just got a lot more interesting.



