Patrick Reed

2022 - 9 - 11

Post cover
Image courtesy of "GolfDigest.com"

Patrick Reed makes a case for why playing for LIV isn't much ... (GolfDigest.com)

Patrick Reed been one of the more active Americans to play on the DP World Tour and says he doesn't see a big difference between doing that and competing in ...

It just shows that the LIV guys are still ready to play and hungry for competition.” “I've played on the PGA Tour and European Tour at the same time. “The guys have been supportive and acting the same way to me as if whenever I was playing on the PGA Tour,” he said. I don't see any difference between me playing the PGA Tour and here and playing on LIV and here. “I feel like we have a mutual respect, the guys on The European Tour and myself. And when Billy [Horschel] won here last year it felt like the same as if a normal player won from over here. Inevitably, he was quizzed more on his experiences off the course at the end of a controversial week marked by conflict between those of a LIV persuasion and those more inclined to an establishment view. We need to allow the guys to play, be competitive and do what we do best. “The guys that are on LIV are really, really good golfers,” he pointed out. Long before the former Masters champion committed a large chunk of his future to the endlessly lucrative but less-challenging entity that is LIV Golf, he was a member of the European Tour (he is now an honorary member of what is now the DP World Tour). “I enjoy the different questions we get asked on a links,” he says. The pair combined for a better-ball score of 58, one or other making birdie on each of the last nine-holes.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Newstalk"

SUNDAY PAPER REVIEW | Patrick Reed bares his soul... and ... (Newstalk)

Joe Molloy was joined by 2010 All-Ireland winner Clíodhna O'Connor and journalist Conor McKeon on this weekend's edition of the Sunday Paper Review.

Joe Molloy was joined by 2010 All-Ireland winner Clíodhna O'Connor and journalist Conor McKeon on this weekend's edition of the Sunday Paper Review. Has sport and its superstars become too homogenized? SUNDAY PAPER REVIEW

Explore the last week