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Jon Rahm addressed questions about LIV Golf at a press conference, emphasizing that he is not a lawyer or businessman. LIV Golf CEO Scott OâNeil highlighted the league's momentum and the hard work ahead.
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Jon Rahm looks on at LIV Golf Mexico City last month. Rahm won for his second victory of the season.Getty Images
Jon Rahm made a couple of things clear during his Tuesday press conference at LIV Golfâs stop in Washington D.C. â heâs not a lawyer, and heâs not much of a businessman. Another? LIV executives âhave a lot of hard work to do.â
Rahm, his Legion XIII teammates, and LIV Golf CEO Scott OâNeil addressed the media on Tuesday at Trump National D.C., their first availability since the Saudi Public Investment Fund announced last week it would only fund the breakaway league through the remainder of the season.
OâNeil spoke first, both in a lengthy Q and A session with LIV CCO Ilana Finley and by taking questions from reporters on-site. He discussed the business side of things (âI have never seen momentum like thisâ) and that heâs feeling inspired by the pressure (âI feel like we have a clear path to a winâ).
âI understand uncertainty is difficult for some people, and I understand that not knowing what tomorrow brings can be a challenge,â he said. âThis is 100 percent what I love to do, this moment. Everybody is meant for a certain thing in their life. I believe this is what I am meant for. I love this moment.â
Jon Rahm during LIV Golf Mexico.
The most obvious discussion topic was one of the first questions Rahm was asked:
Jon Rahm stated he is not a lawyer or businessman and mentioned that LIV executives have significant work to do.
The Saudi Public Investment Fund announced it would only fund LIV Golf through the remainder of the season.
Scott OâNeil described the momentum as unprecedented and expressed inspiration from the pressure to succeed.
Jon Rahm's press conference took place at Trump National D.C. during LIV Golf's stop in Washington D.C.
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âI think thatâs obviously a question for the business people,â Rahm said. âWe want to be here. Itâs been a lot of fun. I want to keep competing. I want to keep sharing some time with them. But only time will tell. Scott and his team have a lot of hard work to do, but obviously theyâre experienced in the area, and thatâs why theyâve been chosen to take this role.â
Rahm said when he first heard the reports of the leagueâs uncertain future while in Mexico a couple of weeks ago he tried to ignore them, since at that point they were just ârumorsâ and he didnât want to waste energy on them.
âSo for me, the reality kind of came afterwards,â he said Tuesday. âI would say, like everybody, surprised, obviously unexpected. We did hear the news that there would be funding through for many years, so unexpected.â
Last week, Golf Digest reported representatives for several LIV players reached out to the PGA Tour to discuss potential pathways back.
Rahm said Tuesday he had âno ideaâ if he could get out of his contract anyway.
âI couldnât tell you. I have very few talents in my life, and reading a contract or business are not two of them,â Rahm said. âAs of right now, I have several years on my contract left, and Iâm pretty sure they did a pretty good job when they drafted that. So I donât see many ways out, and as of right now, Iâm not really thinking about it since we still have a season to play and majors to compete for. So itâs not something I want to think about just yet.â
OâNeil and Rahm both spoke of a future business plan but didnât go into details. Rahm said LIV has been good about talking to team captains and listening to them about potential format changes so that LIV can continue to evolve to optimize the business, and he agreed that for a business plan to change, there might have to be concessions on the playersâ end.
âItâs a playbook that wonât surprise too many people once you see it,â OâNeil said, when asked about right-sizing the business and if purses might shrink. âWe have a good runway through this season fortunately, and itâs for next year that weâre going to be making some pretty significant, substantive changes. Itâs all stuff youâve heard from me. If you can piece together what Iâve said over the last six months, there wonât be too much surprise in terms of what you find.â
This weekâs tournament begins Thursday at Trump National. Itâs LIVâs final tune-up before next weekâs PGA Championship, where a dozen league members are exempt for the second major of the year at Aronimink outside Philadelphia.
In the meantime, Rahm says the questions about LIVâs future are simply just âextra noiseâ but not necessarily a distraction. Heâs going for his third win of the season this week.
âThereâs no denying it, right?â Rahm said. âBut I think we deal with it as athletes honestly. I think itâs part of the job a lot of times, and sometimes that extra noise is internal for something that may be happening family-wise thatâs not public, which is much worse than, I would say, this. At the end of the day, we practice enough so once you get in competition mode, it doesnât matter. It might be a worry before or after, but it shouldnât be once you get to that first tee. Weâve said a few times, when itâs so uncertain and so out of our control, thereâs really nothing to think about.â
The post Jon Rahm, amid swirling LIV questions, plays through âextra noiseâ appeared first on Golf.