Skip to main content

Bryson DeChambeau becomes the last domino to drop out of LIV lawsuit against PGA

Bryson DeChambeau is the latest LIV golfer to remove his name from the lawsuit against the PGA Tour.

Bryson DeChambeau, LIV Golf, PGA
Bryson DeChambeau, LIV Golf, PGA
Photo by Asanka Ratnayake/Getty Images

Bryson DeChambeau is the latest and final golfer to withdraw his name in the ongoing antitrust lawsuit between LIV Golf and the PGA Tour, according to Golf Digest. Now all 11 golfers that were initially in the case have removed their names.

DeChambeau was one of three players suspended by the PGA Tour alongside Matt Jones and Peter Uihlein. Those were the final three players in the lawsuit until now. Uihlein withdrew earlier this month, and now the last two dominos have fallen.

Uihlein and DeChambeau were challenging their suspensions when they chose to leave the PGA Tour for the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Tour. The antitrust lawsuit first surfaced in August 2022 when 11 players filed it. Those 11 players were DeChambeau, Jones, Uihlein, Phil Mickelson, Talor Gooch, Hudson Swafford, Carlos Ortiz, Abraham Ancer, Pat Perez, Jason Kokrak and Ian Poulter. Not long after the initial 11 were filed, LIV Golf joined the lawsuit. Nine months later and only the rival tour remains.

According to the court documents, LIV sued the PGA Tour for bad faith and “egregious interference with LIV Golf’s contractual and prospective business relationships.” Not long after LIV filed, the PGA Tour followed up with a countersuit against the rival tour.

Bryson DeChambeau’s agent told Golfweek his client decided to remove himself, so he could focus on competing at the highest level and growing the game globally. Ahead of the LIV Tulsa event, reporters talked with DeChambeau, and he said it wasn’t his fight.

“I have a responsibility to grow the Crushers, grow my team, and I need to focus on golf for the most part,” DeChambeau told Golfweek. “They’ll resolve it, it’ll be figured out one way or the other, and it’s not my fight. That’s my thought on it.”

More in Golf

Golf
Rory McIlroy in U.S. Open contention after first roundRory McIlroy in U.S. Open contention after first round
Golf

Rory McIlroy is well in contention after the first round of the U.S. Open

By RJ Ochoa
Golf
Deloitte is helping to make the rules of golf more accessible and fan-friendlyDeloitte is helping to make the rules of golf more accessible and fan-friendly
Golf

The rules of golf are well on display at the U.S. Open

By RJ Ochoa
Golf
Jordan Spieth is ready for the U.S. OpenJordan Spieth is ready for the U.S. Open
Golf

Jordan Spieth is as ready as he can be for the U.S. Open

By RJ Ochoa
Golf
Jason Day helps stories to visualize successJason Day helps stories to visualize success
Golf

Jason Day has a unique approach to “stories” during his rounds

By RJ Ochoa
Golf
T-Mobile made the U.S. Women’s Open even betterT-Mobile made the U.S. Women’s Open even better
Golf

The U.S. Women’s Open at Riviera was a huge success

By RJ Ochoa
Golf
Brian Urlacher views the ACC as celebrity golf’s majorBrian Urlacher views the ACC as celebrity golf’s major
Golf

The American Century Championship is basically a major for celebrity golfers

By RJ Ochoa

Comments
Loading comments
Getting the conversation ready...