By DOUG FERGUSON
The PGA Tour has acquired a minority stake in the European Tour's media production company as part of an alliance announced Friday, a big first step toward developing a more unified golf schedule around the world.
The deal effectively makes the two leading tours more partners than rivals. The tours said in a statement it would allow them to collaborate on commercial opportunities and global media rights in certain territories.
While seen as a pivotal first step, any notion of a world tour — which golf executives have contemplated for more than a decade — remains some years away. The immediate goal is to figure out a schedule that keeps the tours from competing against each other and strengthening events on both sides of the Atlantic and beyond.
As part of the agreement, PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan will join the European Tour board.
Keith Pelley, the chief executive of the European Tour, said the partnership grew out of golf organizations having to work together at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic to rearrange the major championship season for men and women.
“We shared the challenges of working through a year neither of us could have ever imagined and we found definite synergies in many areas of our respective tours,” Pelley said.
The announcement comes toward the end of a devastating year financially for both tours. The PGA Tour has lost more money than Europe because of its size, though it had more in reserve to handle the crisis.
The PGA Tour shut down for three months, and then resumed June 8 and played a tournament every week except for this one, with no reduction in prize money. Two of its Asia tournaments in South Korean and Japan moved to the western U.S. with a purse of $9.75 million (CJ Cup at Shadow Creek) and $8 million (Zozo Championship at Sherwood).
The European Tour resumed in July with a series of new tournaments geared toward giving its members tournaments to play while maintaining a strict bubble to protects against the spread of the coronavirus. Players would stay in regions such as the Iberian peninsula and the UK, though the total purse was rarely more than 1 million euros.
The exception was the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, the flagship event at its headquarters, the Scottish Open and the DP World Tour Championship next month in Dubai.
The gap between the tours has grown so much in the last decade there have been rumblings of a merger of the tours, or even a takeover given the PGA Tour's wealth. Monahan referred only to a partnership, and that “we look forward to working together for the benefit of the men's professional game and for golf fans around the world.”
A week before the pandemic, the PGA Tour announced a new media rights deal that starts in 2022 and is said to be worth $7 billion over nine years, which includes digital.
The tour also has a 12-year deal with Discovery, which owns Golf TV.
London-based Discovery also is a rights holder for the European Tour, which has various contracts with TV companies given a schedule that plays in more countries than any tour.
The PGA Tour has become so lucrative that Europe's best players have taken up membership on both tours. Of the 20 Europeans among the top 75 in the world, only four are not PGA Tour members.
___
More AP golf: apnews.com/tag/apf-Golf
"share" - Google News
November 27, 2020 at 10:47PM
https://ift.tt/379srUO
PGA Tour gets share of European Tour TV as part of alliance - Your Valley
"share" - Google News
https://ift.tt/2VXQsKd
https://ift.tt/3d2Wjnc
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "PGA Tour gets share of European Tour TV as part of alliance - Your Valley"
Post a Comment