6 LIV players receive last-minute major invites, leaving 1 surprise omission
patrick reed
Patrick Reed was one of six LIV golfers who received a late invite to the PGA Championship this week.
This season’s next major championship is so close that our countdown has made it to single-digit days. Nine, to be exact. Which made it high time for the PGA of America to finalize next week’s PGA Championship field with special invites. And they mixed in a surprise or two.
The field of 156 was officially finalized Tuesday morning, with six LIV golfers receiving an invite. Most of those came as expected.
The PGA of America typically invites any players ranked in the top 100 in the Official World Golf Ranking, which meant the likes of Adrian Meronk, Patrick Reed and Lucas Herbert weren’t surprises to earn admission.
LIV Golf tournaments do not receive OWGR points (at the moment) because the league has failed to establish its tournaments to fit various OWGR standards. But Meronk and Herbert both joined that tour this year, so they’ve held on to enough OWGR points from a year ago to qualify. Reed, on the other hand, has played a number of Asian Tour events, which offer points, and also fared pretty well in major championships, which dish out the most points. His 12th-place finish at the Masters last month pushed him back inside the top 100 in the world, ensuring he will compete in his 42nd straight major next week.
Outside the top 100 OWGR is where the invites get most interesting. 22-year-old David Puig received an invite to Valhalla next week after playing as much golf this year as any of his LIV colleagues. Puig has already played in four Asian Tour events in 2024, in addition to a bunch toward the end of 2023. This year, he’s finished in the top 10 in all of them, even winning the Malaysian open in February. He’s ranked No. 106 right now by the OWGR and 103 by DataGolf, which measures players exclusively on their performance, regardless of tour.
In other words, Puig is right there on the edge of the top-level golf, and plenty worthy of an invite based on his worldwide finishes. Dean Burmester presents an even more fascinating case, as he ranks outside the top 100 OWGR but well inside that number via DataGolf. Burmester won multiple tournaments in his native South Africa at the tail end of 2023, and then won LIV Golf’s pre-Masters event in Miami. As a result, DataGolf calls him the 38th-best player in the world right now. Yes, even higher than Brooks Koepka. The PGA of America deemed him a value add to its field and now he’ll play in his eighth career major championship.
The final LIV golfer to accept a major championship invite may surprise you. It’s Talor Gooch, world No. 644, and not Louis Oosthuizen, world No. 125.