Ranking LIV Golf's Best Players Through Its First Two Seasons
The excitement is building to a crescendo.
No, wait. That’s the PGA Tour’s new “FedEx Cup Fall,” which is a lot like the old FedEx Cup Fall only with bigger purses and more of those tiresome FedEx Cup points.
The Ranking meant LIV Golf, which has been on holiday (probably FedEx Cup-induced). LIV Golf has three events left, starting next week with a return to the Chicago area’s Rich Harvest Farms.
While you were sweating out that unforgettable FedEx Cup finale (Viktor Hovland won so don’t bother looking it up), The Ranking updated its proprietary LIV Golf Rankings. (Well, when its staff wasn’t betting Women’s World Cup soccer matches—Japan, you brought shame to our account!)
These LIV Golf rankings are not complicated math, which doesn’t prevent The Ranking from making mistakes that would dismay its fifth-grade teacher in the unlikely event she was still alive—she’d be at least 125 by now.
Here’s how the rankings work: We count how many opponents a player beats, loses to or ties each week in the 48-player LIV Golf events. When Dustin Johnson won, for instance, his record that week was 47-0-0. When Sergio Garcia finished 45th in this year’s Orlando event, he earned a 3-44-0 mark. Simple. LIV Golf hasn’t played that many tournaments so these rankings include all 2022 and 2023 results.
In addition, we included how LIV Golf players finished in the four majors. We capped the number of players in those at 88 to match the Masters field in order to make the four majors equal in value. A dead-last, missed cut at the U.S. Open counted as 0-87-0 instead of 0-155-0, for instance. That still makes the majors nearly double in value compared to a regular LIV tournament.
Nobody else is ranking the LIV Golf guys (Ed. note: Actually, SI Golf ranks LIV players against players from all other global tours.) but somebody ought to. So we do. Here again are highlights, low lights and Bud Coors Lights from The Ranking’s (flawed) numbers…