One Membership. Four Times the Value.

InsideGOLF Premium
News

Mike Tirico explains how LIV’s growth might actually help the PGA Tour

From Monday Night Football to the Open Championship, Mike Tirico can do it all. 

“If you have ever turned on a television in the history of your life, you know this man coming here today,” GOLF’s Subpar co-host Drew Stoltz said.

Tirico made sports more entertaining for the last 35 years, bringing his boundless energy to every major event covered by ESPN and NBC. In doing so, he didn’t just research names, numbers, and statistics – he was privy to large-scale, structural changes in other sports, changes like the one we’re currently seeing in golf.

As a play-by-play broadcaster, it’s rarely Tirico’s job to offer his opinion, but that doesn’t mean he is without one. Particularly not on the topic of LIV Golf, and how the upstart league will affect the PGA Tour going forward.

“I think it’s going to force the PGA Tour to be better,” he said. 

Politics aside, Tirico says, LIV Golf is simply a study in market forces. Now that there’s a competing tour, the PGA Tour will be forced to adapt. If they make the proper adjustments, the result will be better for everyone.

News
How Mike Tirico became the most qualified 'amateur' in Masters history
By: James Colgan

This, Tirico explained to co-hosts Drew Stoltz and Colt Knost, is the effect of the competitor: “It makes us better because you know that people are going to catch you.”

Champagne sprays, festival-like entertainment, and one very outspoken commissioner, LIV Golf couldn’t be more different from the Tour. The PGA Tour has already made significant purse increases to compete, but do they have to make other adjustments?

“Competition is good,” Tirico said. “Checks and balances are really good.” 

But for commissioner Jay Monahan and the Tour’s executive leadership team, strategic questions remain. How much change is good? How much change leaves the Tour losing its identity? 

No matter what changes we see in the coming months, Tirico sees it as an opportunity for the PGA Tour to grow, revamp, and reshape – not suffer. 

To hear more of Mike Tirico’s sportscasting stories and observations on Tiger Woods, check out the full Subpar interview below. 

Related Articles

News
Matt Fitzpatrick reveals his favorite U.S. Open venue
By: Jessica Marksbury
News
'It was unfair': Major champ laments fan treatment of Wyndham Clark
By: Josh Sens
News
Rich Lerner shares most memorable line he's ever heard about Tiger Woods' peak
By: Jessica Marksbury
News
'We're letting it fly': Rich Lerner's new book doesn't hold back
By: Jessica Marksbury
News
How hard is it *after* instantly earning your Tour card? This pro knows
By: Jack Hirsh
News
Joe Buck explains the challenges of calling pro golf
By: GOLF Editors
News
Joe Buck explains 'trap' he fell into when calling golf on TV
By: Josh Berhow
News
How do you take a good range session to the course? An expert explains
By: Josh Berhow
News
How Wyndham Clark's mental-game coach helped him stay calm in chaos
By: Jessica Marksbury
was:
Exit mobile version