Without an incentive to win, LIV Golf only set itself up to lose

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Greg Norman, who is no longer with LIV Golf, and asir Al-Rumayyan, Governor of Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia pictured in 2022. Greg Norman, who is no longer with LIV Golf, and asir Al-Rumayyan, Governor of Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia pictured in 2022. AP

If it’s true — and there’s little reason to believe it isn’t, based on the increasing noise and recent credible reports — LIV Golf is dead.

Sure, LIV Golf, which this week already “postponed” its upcoming event in New Orleans to a fall date, might stage more tournaments before the doors are officially shuttered.

But the Saudi-backed rival tour to the PGA Tour is about to be Saudi-backed no longer, according to a Wednesday report in The Wall Street Journal.

And that’s a death knell for the swashbuckling tour that came in hot, rattled cages at PGA Tour headquarters in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., and made a lot of players — both on LIV and on the PGA Tour (which panicked too late and bloated tournament purses in an effort to slow the LIV invasion) — generational money.

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