Patrick Reed says that having more battles between LIV and PGA Tour golfers in events, such as the one he had with Rory McIlroy in Dubai, will help tensions to calm down between the two sets of players.
A judge put a hold on the DP World Tour being able to ban LIV Golf stars from playing in their events, enabling Reed and his fellow LIV players such as Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood to go toe-to-toe with McIlroy in Dubai.
Tensions then got turned up a notch when McIlroy blanked Reed on the driving range and the American tossed a branded LIV Golf tee at the Northern Irishman before the event had even started.
The two then fought it out on the course, with McIlroy winning the title by a shot courtesy of a final hole birdie, preventing what would have been one of the most tense playoffs we’ve ever seen.
Although Reed is one of the more combative players in the world, he insists that it was a good natured rivalry with McIlroy in Dubai and feels that the more the two sets of players face each other the more it will dilute the tension and calm the whole situation down.
“I think you’re going start seeing over (the next) year, hopefully, everything’s able to kind of calm down and allow that to happen more often,” Reed told Golf Digest. (opens in new tab)
“Not just on the European Tour but who knows, maybe later on you have more of these battles more frequently.”
Reed and McIlroy have had plenty of battles over the years, most notably their epic 2016 Ryder Cup singles match at Hazeltine and their final round pairing at the 2018 Masters where Reed won his one Major title.
“I can’t hear you, I can’t hear you!” 👂Patrick Reed and Rory McIlroy produced a thrilling contest at Hazeltine: https://t.co/PsXyxFuYiYWatch the #RyderCup throughout the week live on Sky Sports’ dedicated Ryder Cup channel. pic.twitter.com/iOJT9pj6IMSeptember 25, 2018
“It was great battling with Rory,” Reed said. “The thing about Dubai is it got blown out of proportion, as if it was something horrible between two players, when him and I were staying at the same hotel and both times we saw each other (we said) ‘Hi, how you doing?’ It was normal.
“Was there probably some gamesmanship? And probably some stuff going on because of a bunch of other stuff?
“I’ve always had full respect for Rory. I’ve always loved the battles I’ve had against him. I’ve just watched the (2016) Ryder Cup highlights – they are insane.
“Same thing at Augusta (for Reed’s 2018 Masters win) when I…
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