The Adelaide Shuffle: What LIV’s Latest Withdrawals Tell Us About Tour Health in 2026
There’s an old saying in professional golf: the schedule doesn’t care about your excuses. But here we are on the eve of LIV Golf Adelaide, and the tournament is already dealing with its third significant withdrawal—this time Martin Kaymer stepping back with a left elbow injury that’s forced John Catlin into the reserves’ rotation.
Now, before anyone starts writing obituaries for franchise golf, let me be clear: minor injuries happen. They always have. I’ve watched enough tour schedules over 35 years to know that February withdrawals are part of the fabric of professional golf. What strikes me, though, is the pattern we’re seeing here in 2026, and what it might signal about how seriously players are treating the LIV structure versus traditional competition.
When Captains Go Missing
Martin Kaymer isn’t just any player sitting out a week—he’s a franchise captain. That matters. In my experience covering team events, captains carry symbolic weight. Their presence sets a tone. So when Kaymer posted to social media that he wouldn’t be in Adelaide due to his injury, the statement itself was notably measured and professional:
“I won’t be playing in Adelaide this week due to a minor injury on my left elbow. Sitting out is never an easy call, especially for an event as special as LIV Golf Adelaide. The positive is that recovery is going well and I’m feeling strong. This is just a short pause with the focus firmly on the long season ahead.”
That’s the right tone—honest about the injury, optimistic about recovery, committed to the franchise. I believe he means it. But here’s what I’m reading between the lines: Kaymer, who finished 37th in the 2025 LIV standings with a best finish of T8 in Virginia, is making a calculated decision about his season. He’s protecting his body for what matters most to him down the road.
That’s prudent. That’s also telling.
Three Withdrawals Paint a Picture
Let’s look at the actual situation on the ground at The Grange GC this week:
Martin Kaymer (Cleeks GC) — Elbow injury. Replaced by John Catlin, a reserve who’s been grinding in the LIV ecosystem, having played five tournaments in 2024 and three in 2025.
Phil Mickelson (HyFlyers) — Family matters keeping him sidelined since last August’s LIV Golf Team Championship. Wade Ormsby, a five-time Asian Tour winner, steps in.
Lee Westwood (fourth captain implied) — Wrist injury. Ben Schmidt, the 23-year-old who finished T41 in Riyadh, expected back this week.
In my three decades covering the tour, I’ve seen enough injury reports to know when something’s routine and when it’s not. Kaymer’s elbow? Routine. Mickelson’s extended absence? That’s the real story. The man hasn’t played competitive golf since August. That’s seven months. For a player of Mickelson’s profile and franchise responsibility, that’s significant.
The Reserve Player Reality
What actually impressed me here is how seamlessly LIV is managing these substitutions. John Catlin stepping in isn’t some panic move—it’s exactly what the reserve structure is designed for. Catlin came close to securing his LIV card, finishing fourth in the International Series Rankings after winning at Macau in 2024. He had a T7 finish at Nashville. This is a credible player filling in, not some last-minute desperation call.
That speaks well to the league’s infrastructure. The franchise model, for all the criticism it’s received, actually has some built-in flexibility that traditional tour golf lacks. When the PGA Tour deals with withdrawals, they scramble. LIV has reserve players ready to go.
Still, I think there’s something worth noting: these aren’t rank-and-file players sitting out. These are franchise captains and significant names. That’s a different dynamic than, say, a mid-tier player missing an event.
The Long Season Ahead
What I keep coming back to is Kaymer’s statement about “the long season ahead.” February is early. Even in a franchise structure that asks a lot of its captains, the smart money is on protecting your body for a grind that runs through December. I’ve caddied for enough professionals to know that sentiment—it’s not about Adelaide, it’s about what comes after.
“I’ll be cheering for the guys this week and back in Cleeks colors soon. I appreciate all the support.”
That’s a captain who still cares about his team, even if he’s sitting this one out. The question is whether the Adelaide event itself—special as it may be in LIV’s calendar—registers as non-negotiable for these players, or whether it’s one stop among many on a very long calendar.
What Happens Next
Look, the bottom line is this: golf tournaments happen with replacements all the time, and Adelaide will go on just fine. Wade Ormsby is a solid player. John Catlin is hungry to prove himself on a bigger stage. Ben Schmidt will get another opportunity. The event will be competitive, the golf will be good, and LIV will move on to Hong Kong and beyond.
But the pattern of absences—whether injury, family matters, or strategic rest—tells me that even within the franchise model, players are making individualized calculations about when to show up and how hard to push. That’s not a condemnation. That’s just professionalism evolving in real time.
Adelaide will be fine. Watch for what these absences mean about priorities as the season unfolds.

