Chris Condon

Either Masters champion Jon Rahm doesn’t appear to be as supportive of PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan as he let on two weeks ago at the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool, or he’s been rethinking where he stands.

Rahm, the No. 3 player in the world, said on Monday on the Spanish language podcast Golf Sin Etiquetas that Monahan and Keith Pelley, CEO of the DP World Tour, “have to earn trust again. When they say that the tour is of the players and — regardless of whether what they did is good or bad, without speaking to anyone from the Board of Directors, Rory McIlroy or whoever is there … they have to earn that respect again.”

Rahm’s remarks were translated on Twitter by @handicap_54.

When meeting the media prior to the first round at the Open Championship, Rahm threw his support behind Monahan. It came while other top players such as Scottie Scheffler, Jordan Spieth and Xander Schauffele suggested that their trust in the embattled tour commissioner had waned after Monahan revealed the surprise deal June 6 in which the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia — the group that funds the LIV Golf League — had struck a framework agreement that would potentially result in more than $1 billion being invested in the two tours.

“Jay has behaved so professionally and so well with me and my family,’’ Rahm said at Hoylake. “In that sense, he’s a really good man. Now, as it comes to what he’s been doing for us and the PGA Tour, I think he’s done a fantastic job. I would say it was unexpected what happened. The turn they took without us knowing was very unexpected, but I still think he’s been doing a great job. And right now, after that happened, I only think it’s fair to give them the right time to work things out.”

When he was asked if he’s lost “trust” in Monahan, Rahm said, “My trust? No.”

During the podcast (co-hosted by former tour pro Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño), Rahm went on to explain how he learned of the framework agreement between the three organisations just minutes before the deal was made public.

“Two minutes before the announcement came out, someone from the PGA Tour contacted me and told me everything. I thought it was a joke,” Rahm said. “And this is what they should have done from the beginning. Instead, they generated division then decided to come together again. I hope they reach an agreement. Looking ahead? I hope they manage to reach an agreement. I think LIV will continue, from what I understand and from what I’ve talked to their players. None of them intend to return, and that’s why they left the PGA Tour. They left for a reason.”

Rahm was optimistic that the LIV investment meant upgrades to both the PGA Tour and the DP World Tour.

“Hopefully, with all this capital that can come, we can create a PGA Tour that is better for everyone, that the week is better, that the gym is better, that there is a recovery area, that the physiotherapists have better conditions, that the food is more consistent and the best (week after week), that there is a charter flight for the players (between the weeks of each tournament), that having the PGA Tour card implies that you have a minimum of money, so you can make your life as a golfer. I say this last thing because the fact that you can lose money on the PGA Tour being in the top 150, is criminal. And I have told the PGA Tour many times. There are many things that they could improve, apart from the money for FedEx and whatever.

“And for the DP World Tour I think the same,” Rahm continued, “thinking of those who want to continue playing at home, with a better tour. Now, I have no idea what they want. And I hope that whatever they want doesn’t conflict with this. And I’m not the only one who thinks so. I understand most of those who went LIV.”

Rahm, 28, has won four times this season on the PGA Tour and leads the FedEx Cup standings heading into next week’s playoffs. He acknowledged he had one conversation with LIV CEO Greg Norman in Mexico in early 2022 after receiving a message well before LIV launched last June.

That said, he had no problem with Phil Mickelson, a close friend, and countryman Sergio Garcia leaving for the rival tour, and he added that he often jokes with them about wearing shorts, the 54-hole format and playing out of golf carts. “Phil respects my decision and I respect his decision,” Rahm said. “He has told me that I have no reason to go to LIV. And he has told me that several times.”