Home / Golf / Bryson DeChambeau’s LIV Golf Honeymoon Won’t Last Bryson DeChambeau’s LIV Golf Honeymoon Won’t Last Written by Sports EditorJohn Moriello Updated –Jul 1, 2022 We publish independently audited content meeting strict editorial standards. Ads on our site are served by Google AdSense and are not controlled or influenced by our editorial team. While Dustin Johnson and Patrick Reed are among the golfers who resigned from the PGA Tour upon defecting to the upstart LIV Golf series, Bryson DeChambeau opted to keep his membership. It likely doesn’t matter. Greg Norman reportedly dished out a boatload of money to the 2020 U.S. Open champion, likely locking DeChambeau into LIV Golf for as long as LIV Golf is a thing. Secondly, DeChambeau will remain persona non grata to the PGA for a long time, even if the start-up tour quickly goes belly-up. For now, however, DeChambeau’s change of allegiance constitutes one of LIV’s big wins, so the honeymoon continues. Bryson DeChambeau is enjoying a perk the PGA Tour wouldn’t grant Bryson DeChambeau plays his second shot on the second hole during the LIV Golf Invitational on June 30, 2022, in North Plains, Oregon. | Jonathan Ferrey/LIV Golf via Getty Images LIV Golf has one full tournament under its belt and is in North Plains, Oregon, this weekend for its second event. Unsurprisingly for a start-up, organizers are winging it in several aspects. That includes media arrangements. LIV Golf does not have a network agreement in place, so it streams coverage via the internet. TV coverage, and the money that comes with it, is an important element that LIV Golf needs to put in place, but the money from the tour’s Saudi backers more than makes up for short-term losses in that area. In the meantime, the rival to the PGA Tour will take whatever it can get when it comes to attracting interest. To that end, LIV Golf doesn’t place restrictions on golfers that current performers faced during their PGA Tour days. Namely, the PGA Tour grants near-exclusive rights to its television partners when it comes to audio and video from a tournament course. The photographers that TV viewers might see during tournaments are generally from wire services, magazines, and local media, and getting credentialed requires agreeing to restrictions on how the images get used. LIV Golf isn’t enforcing any such restrictions. Bryson DeChambeau, one of the most marketing-conscious pro golfers, is taking advantage. Bryson DeChambeau has a media entourage in tow https://twitter.com/Daniel_Rapaport/status/1542214447611097089 Golf Digest reporter Dan Rapaport tweeted a photo on Wednesday from the site of the LIV Golf event in Oregon. In it, Bryson DeChambeau was accompanied by a bevy of his own media content people collecting content that he could share on social media or use in other forms of promotion. LIV Golf organizers have no issue with that. In fact, they almost certainly encourage their golfers to follow DeChambeau’s lead since the lack of a network TV deal leaves the series trailing the PGA Tour when it comes to publicity. Whether it happens this year or next (and the latter is more likely), LIV Golf will get itself onto network TV or a better-known streaming service. Doing so, however, will require a tradeoff. In exchange for the rights fee, the tour will have to accommodate its new benefactor. That will likely require restrictions on media resembling what the PGA Tour imposes. And that could mean telling DeChambeau to leave the personal media entourage back at the hotel. We may learn at that point just how married he is to the renegade tour. Like Sportscasting on Facebook. Follow us on Twitter @sportscasting19 and subscribe to our YouTube channel. RELATED: Updated LIV Golf Roster Written by Sports EditorJohn Moriello John Moriello started covering sports in 1982, began digital publishing in 1995, and joined Sportscasting in 2020. A graduate of St. John Fisher University, he finds inspiration in the underdogs and the fascinating stories sports can tell (both the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat). John expertly covers all aspects of NASCAR. Beginning with his 2014 coverage at Fox Sports of the aftermath of the dirt-race tragedy in which Kevin Ward Jr. died after being struck by a car driven by NASCAR Hall of Famer Tony Stewart, John has excelled as a journalist who specializes in the motorsports world. He previously spent more than three decades covering high school sports and worked as a beat writer covering Big East football and basketball, but NASCAR is now where the true expertise falls. John is a member of the New York State Basketball Hall of Fame (2013), the President of the New York State Sportswriters Association, and a two-time Best of Gannett winner for print and online collaborations whose work has appeared on FoxSports.com and MaxPreps.com. All posts by John Moriello
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