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Thomas Pieters on LIV Golf, Saudi Arabia and the PGA Tour

Thomas Pieters on LIV Golf, Saudi Arabia and the PGA Tour

Thomas Pieters still can’t help but laugh when he mentions his new team, RangeGoats GC.

The No. 34 player in the world was the best signing for the re-vamped LIV Golf League ahead of its second season, which began last month in Mexico, and joined Barstool Sports’ Fore Play podcast to discuss his reasons for joining LIV and his feelings about the PGA Tour.

The Belgian said life hasn’t changed too much since he made the jump to the Greg Norman-led and Saudi Arabia-backed circuit, he still gets on a plane, travels to a golf tournament and tries to win.

“Obviously there’s a lot of talk, but at the end of the day, it’s a personal opinion, and it’s just golf, it’s not life and death,” said Pieters, who noted he called DP World Tour chief executive Keith Pelley to inform him of his choice. “I made the decision, and I move on.”

LIV Golf has long been criticized as another avenue for Saudi Arabia to sportswash its controversial human rights record, and when asked if he had any issues with the Public Investment Fund backing LIV, Pieters clapped back at those who are critical of the upstart circuit.

“I know my money comes from an American-based company,” said Pieters, referencing LIV Golf Investments, where PIF is the majority shareholder. Yasir Al-Rumayyan is the current governor of the PIF, and serves directly under Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who has controlled the fund since 2015.

“I think the PIF is in about 150 boards if I’m not wrong, so anything you touch on a daily basis is funded by Saudi money, so I think it’s a bit hypocritical, some of the things that are being said,” Pieters continued. “Obviously the things that have happened, they’re horrible. I’m here to play golf. It’s not really something I want to go into. I knew that question was going to be asked, but I don’t really have an answer for that.”

A year later, and the players still can’t answer the single biggest question about their new employer.

“I feel like golfers have gotten too opinionated about everything, and I’m just here to play golf,” he later added. “I’m not dumb, maybe I’ll come across as dumb, but I just want to be happy, that’s all.”

For Pieters, that wasn’t life on the PGA Tour. He loved his time in college at Illinois, where he won the individual national title in 2012, but he got lonely on the Tour.

“As a kid…

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