![]() ![]() Three players - Talor Gooch, Hudson Swafford and Matt Jones - sought a temporary restraining order last August to play in the PGA Tour's lucrative postseason. LIV Golf is leading an antitrust lawsuit in federal court in California - the PGA Tour filed a countersuit - and a tentative trial date has been set for no earlier than January of next year. "It is, of course, regrettable that resources, both financial and staffing, which could have been otherwise deployed across our organization, have been impacted by this lengthy arbitration process," Pelley said. The tour said the original fine handed to players competing at Centurion must now be paid within 30 days. Pelley, the panel found, "acted entirely reasonably in refusing releases." Garcia, Schwartzel, Grace and Otaegui withdrew their appeals just before the hearings took place. Sports Resolution heard the case in February over five days of private hearings, with Westwood, Garcia, Patrick Reed, Graeme McDowell, Martin Kaymer, Sam Horsfield, Richard Bland, Shaun Norris, Laurie Canter, Wade Ormsby, Bernd Weisburger, Charl Schwartzel and Branden Grace also having issued appeals. Otaegui won the Andalucia Masters in Spain last fall. ![]() Poulter, Adrian Otaegui of Spain and Justin Harding of South Africa appealed, allowing LIV players to compete in European tour events. The European tour imposed the fine on members competing at the inaugural LIV event at the Centurion Club outside London last June and suspended them from the Scottish Open. LIV Golf did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. "If they adhere to the consequences, if they pay the fines, if they live up to the consequences for breaching what we impose on the future, we welcome them back." They must be European tour members to play in the matches, and that means adhering to the regulations. Pelley said the ruling would make it difficult for any of the LIV players be part of the Ryder Cup matches in Rome at the end of September. The decision could lead to some of them simply resigning their membership. Pelley said he would be headed back to London to work on the next step, including determining what would be a fair penalty for the European tour members who defected and played a full slate of LIV events. "It's not OK to sign up for something and then arbitrarily not adhere to those rules and regulations," Pelley said. He also said it would be looked upon as a landmark case for all sports organizations. These rules and regulations were created by the members for the members to protect the members who signed them." "I'm delighted they've recognized the responsibility we have as an organization to administer our rules and regulations," Pelley said in a conference call from the Masters. Keith Pelley, the European tour chief executive, said he was happy the panel gave clarity to the situation and determined the tour was not being anti-competitive. The ruling allows the European tour to impose fines of 100,000 pounds (US$125,000) on players who competed in the rival league without a conflicting events release. Get the latest newsletters right to your inbox.Download our app to get alerts to your device.The European tour was within its rights to sanction members who competed on the Saudi-funded LIV Golf without permission, an independent tribunal ruled Thursday.Īn appeal panel at Sports Resolutions found that a number of players, including Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood, committed "serious breaches" of the European tour's code of behavior by playing in LIV Golf events last year. ![]()
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