A blockbuster sports deal set to merge two rivals — the PGA Tour, an organizer of top-level professional golf tournaments mostly in the U.S., with LIV Golf, an upstart league funded by Saudi Arabia — stunned players and fans alike this week.
But the tentative plan to combine forces and position Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund to invest billions of dollars in the joint venture goes beyond a lucrative power play by the oil-rich kingdom.
Observers say it’s the Saudis’ latest attempt to flex their influence across a breadth of American institutions, from Hollywood to Silicon Valley, and mine economic opportunities in spite of tense relations with the West in recent years brought on by accusations of human rights abuses and the 2018 killing of journalist and U.S. resident Jamal Khashoggi.
“This is a huge feather in the cap of the Saudis, and it’s a huge victory for them on a number of levels,” said Bernard Haykel, a professor of Near Eastern studies at Princeton University who has written about political and social changes in the country.
While the PGA Tour and LIV Golf clashed publicly, including litigation in which LIV accused the PGA Tour of acting as a monopolistic enterprise and the defections of top PGA Tour players to LIV, the surprise union gives the Saudis a foothold in one of the world’s enduring pastimes.
“The bulk of their investments is in America. It’s the most liquid market and with the greatest returns,” Haykel said. “This is a no-brainer.”
‘Sportswashing’ strategy?
Making inroads in the U.S. golf market, a multibillion-dollar industry, is merely the latest frontier for Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as his government sets its sights on the global sports arena.
The country’s efforts have been gaining momentum.
In 2021, Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund bought Newcastle United, transforming the beleaguered soccer club in England’s Premier League into one of the world’s richest. Newcastle this season ranks in the league’s top five teams in the standings.
Also in 2021, Saudi Arabia introduced its own Grand Prix Formula One motor races, which are held around the globe and are known for attracting celebrities, influencers and foreign dealmakers. This year’s glitzy gathering in the Saudi resort city of Jeddah included after-race concerts headlined by Travis Scott, Charlie Puth and Calvin Harris.
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