Sunday, November 17, 2024

Ryder Cup group chat reaction when Jon Rahm sent LIV Golf message sums them up

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Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton were star performers at the Ryder Cup last year as Europe regained the iconic trophy, but within a few months they both defected to LIV Golf to the surprise of teammates

Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton starred for Europe at the Ryder Cup before quitting the PGA Tour for LIV Golf soon after(Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Shane Lowry has lifted the lid on what went down in the European Ryder Cup group chat as Jon Rahm informed his teammates he was quitting the PGA Tour for LIV Golf.

Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton played a massive part in Europe’s triumph over the Americans at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome in October, but within a few months, they had turned their backs on the PGA Tour and signed mega-money deals with LIV Golf.




Reigning Masters champion Rahm joined in December on a deal believed to be worth in excess of £400million, and world number 17 Hatton followed on the eve of the new LIV season earlier this month. The pair have put their Ryder Cup futures at risk as a result of the move, with European players required to be active members of the DP World Tour to be included when Luke Donald’s team defends their title at Bethpage Black in New York next year.

Lowry has revealed Rahm and Hatton informed their Ryder Cup teammates from Rome of their decision to join LIV Golf before their moves were made official and the Irishman has given an insight into how the players responded to the news.

READ MORE: Jon Rahm told to follow golden rule by Ryder Cup teammates when he left for LIV Golf

“Rumours were big at the time and we were all talking about it individually, and then Jon put a message into the group telling us. Some guys were like ‘Whatever’,” Lowry told Fore Play. “I was like ‘Whatever, that’s your choice. Just don’t go there and kind of s*** on the tours like some people did. Go there and go gracefully and do what you have to do.

“Tyrrell was the same. It was disappointing to see them go and it’s kind of weird that you’re not going to play a tournament with Jon and Tyrrell until the Masters.

“It’s a strange time in golf, so as long guys go and go gracefully and don’t tell everyone how bad the PGA Tour is and how bad the European Tour is, because they’re not. They’re still great tours and we do very well out of professional golf. I wish they wouldn’t go, but it is what it is.”

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