Golf-American Reed latest to join LIV Series

He's a major champion and he'll bring another impressive dynamic to our team-based format at LIV Golf." The eight-event LIV Series, bankrolled to the tune of $250 million by the Saudi's Public Investment Fund (PIF) began this week at the Centurion Club north of London.


Reuters | Updated: 11-06-2022 23:29 IST | Created: 11-06-2022 23:22 IST
Golf-American Reed latest to join LIV Series
Reed, who won the Masters in 2018, has 12 wins on the PGA Tour and the European Tour. Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Former Masters champion Patrick Reed has become the latest golfer to join the lucrative LIV Golf Invitational Series, the Saudi-backed league said on Saturday.

Reed, who won the Masters in 2018, has 12 wins on the PGA Tour and the European Tour. LIV announced Reed as its newest member on Twitter https://twitter.com/LIVGolfInv/status/1535652475411345408. The 31-year-old American joins former world number one Dustin Johnson, six-times major champion Phil Mickelson and former U.S. Open champion Bryson DeChambeau in joining the LIV Series which had its inaugural event in London this week.

The big-hitting DeChambeau jumped ship from the PGA Tour on Friday and will make his debut in the second event of the series in Portland, Oregon, later this month. The PGA Tour said on Thursday it would suspend players who turned out for the LIV event but some golfers had already resigned from the Tour before the sanctions were announced.

"The growing roster of LIV Golf players gets even stronger today with a player of Patrick Reed's calibre," LIV Golf CEO Greg Norman said in a statement. "He has a proven track record as one of the most consistent competitors in pro golf and adds yet another big presence at our tournaments. He's a major champion and he'll bring another impressive dynamic to our team-based format at LIV Golf."

The eight-event LIV Series, bankrolled to the tune of $250 million by the Saudi's Public Investment Fund (PIF) began this week at the Centurion Club north of London. Events, with fields of 48, take place over 54 holes with no cuts and shotgun starts. As well as an individual event, players also compete for teams with huge prize money at stake.

The individual winner of each event will bag $4 million -- the biggest prize in golf history.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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