O’Neil’s missive came as players assembled in Mexico City ahead of this week’s LIV event, where tour organisers were presenting a business-as-usual front.
The tour posted first-round tee times as usual and even poked fun at the rumours on social media.
“Slow news day? We are ON,” one post said, alongside an image with the words “BREAKING NEWS. TUNE IN TOMORROW” and the Mexico City tournament’s starting times.
“LIV Golf funding and operations are continuing as planned,” sources familiar with the tour’s workings told AFP, pointing to a doubling in tour revenue from 2024 to 2025 and recent record attendances in Australia and South Africa.
But Britain’s Telegraph newspaper reported that LIV Golf executives had been called into a meeting in New York to discuss the potential fallout from a withdrawal of Saudi funding.
The speculation comes as the Saudi fund on Wednesday (local time) unveiled a new five-year strategy that will reorganise its investments – an announcement that came against the backdrop of war in the Middle East.
The Gulf region has been hit hard by Iranian barrages on infrastructure, including airports, energy installations and ports following the US and Israeli attack on Iran in late February.
Even before the war, Saudi Arabia’s economic reforms were coming under pressure, with persistently low oil prices in recent years shrinking government revenues.
Cracks have appeared in LIV Golf’s player roster, as five-time major winner Brooks Koepka and former Masters champion Patrick Reed have recently ditched LIV for returns to the PGA Tour.
‘We are pioneers’
If the LIV Golf tour were to cease operations, it is not clear how it would affect its remaining players.
LIV star Sergio Garcia told a press conference in Mexico City that players “haven’t heard anything” since the start of the year, when the wealth fund’s leader Yasir al-Rumayyan told the golfers “that he’s behind us, that they have a long-term project”.
In his letter, O’Neil did not directly dispute the rumours of a Saudi withdrawal, but said that “the life of a start-up movement is often defined by these moments of pressure”.
“We signed up for this because we believe in disrupting the status quo,” wrote the executive.
“We are pioneers, and while the road isn’t always smooth, the destination is worth every mile,” he added.
– AFP