LIV Golf’s 72-Hole Pivot: A Strategic Surrender That Might Actually Work
After 35 years of covering professional golf—including a stretch as Tom Lehman’s caddie back in the ’90s—I’ve learned that the tour business is fundamentally about legitimacy. You can have all the money in the world, but if the scorecard doesn’t match everyone else’s, you’re playing a different game. Which is precisely why LIV Golf’s decision to move from 54 holes to 72 holes in 2026 represents something I never thought I’d see: the breakaway tour actually blinking first.
Let me be clear: this isn’t failure. But it’s not victory either. It’s recalibration, and in my experience, knowing when to recalibrate separates the tours that survive from the ones that become footnotes.
The 54-Hole Gamble That Never Quite Paid Off
When LIV launched five years ago, the 54-hole format was supposed to be revolutionary—faster, fresher, more viewer-friendly. I get it. Television executives hate slow play as much as the rest of us. But here’s what the LIV brain trust underestimated: golf fans don’t just want shorter tournaments. They want tournaments that count the same way. Three rounds versus four rounds isn’t a minor aesthetic difference. It’s a fundamental statement that says, “Your score doesn’t matter quite as much as it does everywhere else.”
Having watched the PGA Tour for decades, I can tell you that player psychology around format is real. Every time a LIV player competed on the traditional tour, they had to recalibrate their entire approach. An extra 18 holes changes fatigue management, risk tolerance, and mental stamina. It’s like asking a sprinter to occasionally run a distance race and expecting them to bring the same energy to both.
The departures of Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed—two significant names heading back to the PGA Tour—suggest they weren’t entirely comfortable living in that alternative reality either.
What the Numbers Tell Us
Let’s look at what LIV will actually be broadcasting in 2026:
| Event | Course | Dates | TV Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| LIV Golf Riyadh | Riyadh Golf Club | Feb. 4-7 | Fox Networks |
| LIV Golf Adelaide | The Grange Golf Club | Feb. 12-15 | Fox Networks |
| LIV Golf Hong Kong | Hong Kong Golf Club | March 5-8 | Fox Networks |
| LIV Golf Singapore | Sentosa Golf Club | March 12-15 | FS1, FS2, Fubo, Fox Sports App |
| LIV Golf South Africa | The Club at Steyn City | March 19-22 | FS1, FS2, Fox, Fubo |
| LIV Golf Mexico City | Club de Golf Chapultepec | April 16-19 | FS1, Fox, Fubo, Fox Sports App |
| LIV Golf Virginia | Trump National DC | May 7-10 | Fox, FBN, Fubo, Fox Sports App |
| LIV Golf Andalucia | Real Club Valderrama | June 4-7 | FS1, FS2, Fubo |
| LIV Golf Louisiana | Bayou Oaks at City Park | June 25-28 | FS1, Fox, FBN, Fubo, Fox Sports App |
| LIV Golf United Kingdom | JCB Golf & Country Club | July 23-26 | FS1, FS2, Fox, Fubo |
| LIV Golf New York | Trump National Bedminster | Aug. 6-9 | Fox, Fubo, Fox Sports App |
| LIV Golf Indianapolis | The Club at Chatham Hills | Aug. 20-23 | Fox, Fubo, Fox Sports App |
| LIV Golf Michigan | The Cardinal at Saint John’s | Aug. 27-30 | FS1, Fox, Fubo, Fox Sports App |
Twelve events across four continents, with robust Fox coverage and streaming options. That’s actually solid infrastructure. The international footprint—from Riyadh to Adelaide to Hong Kong—shows Saudi PIF money isn’t going anywhere. This isn’t a tour in retreat; it’s a tour in transition.
The Real Story: Legitimacy Through Standardization
What strikes me most about this shift is what it represents philosophically. By adopting 72 holes,
“The most striking change is tournaments will now be 72 holes instead of the 54 that served as the tour’s Roman-numeral namesake, putting LIV back on level ground with traditional tours.”
LIV is essentially saying: “We’re playing the same game now.” And that matters more than casual observers might think. It removes the asterisk. It makes every score directly comparable. Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau, Dustin Johnson, and Sergio Garcia—the elite talent that remains—will now be competing in a format that carries the same weight as PGA Tour events.
In my experience covering the Lehman years and watching the tour evolve, I’ve seen that comparability is how legacies are built. Whether we like it or not, the scorecard is currency in professional golf.
Who Leaves, Who Stays—And What It Means
The departures of Koepka and Reed sting. Both were high-profile signings. But the core roster remains substantial. Jon Rahm, fresh off his Masters win mentality, is still very much a draw. Bryson DeChambeau’s long-drive theatrics will still pack arenas. The question now is whether 72-hole legitimacy will stem further defections or accelerate them.
My gut tells me this format change actually stabilizes the roster. It removes one of the primary criticisms—that LIV wasn’t “real” golf—and creates a clearer pathway for players to compete at the highest levels without mental gymnastics.
Is this golf’s future? Probably not entirely. But is it a tour that’s here to stay? With the Fox distribution network,
“LIV Golf will air across multiple Fox networks in 2026, including the flagship channel and FS1, FS2 and Fox Business Network”
and a committed media strategy, the answer is increasingly yes.
LIV Golf isn’t winning the narrative war yet. But in adopting 72-hole golf, it’s finally playing by the same rulebook. That’s not a surrender—it’s smart strategy.
