Patrick Reed quits rebel LIV Golf tour in latest blow to Saudi-backed breakaway

A picture


Patrick Reed has delivered the ­latest high-profile blow to LIV Golf by announcing he will leave the circuit before the start of its 2026 season.The 35-year-old American former Masters champion joins Brooks Koepka by instead focusing on the PGA Tour.Reed will spend his immediate time on the DP World Tour, where he won the Dubai Desert Classic on Sunday.Reed tees up in Bahrain from Thursday.It would now be only natural for LIV to be anxious about talent drain which once ran in their favour.

At Reed’s post-tournament media conference in Dubai he surprisingly revealed he had not yet committed to LIV for this year.He joined the Saudi Arabian‑backed tour in 2022 in a deal worth tens of millions of dollars.In a statement posted on Wednesday, the 2018 Masters winner explained his switch.“After careful thought and consideration, my family and I have decided that I will no longer compete on the LIV Golf Tour,” Reed said.“I am excited to announce that I am returning to the PGA Tour as a past champion member for the 2027 season and am eligible to begin competing in PGA Tour events later this year.

“I will continue to compete and play as an honorary lifetime ­member on the DP World Tour, which is ­something that I am truly honored and excited to do.I’m a traditionalist at heart, and I was born to play on the PGA Tour.”In its own statement, the PGA Tour said: “Patrick Reed has informed the PGA Tour of his desire to return.A nine-time PGA Tour ­winner, he is seeking reinstatement of his PGA Tour membership for the 2027 season, playing out of the past ­champion category.“As a result of resigning his membership in 2022 prior to violating any PGA Tour regulations, Patrick is ­eligible to compete on the PGA Tour as a non-member beginning on 25 August 2026.

He may also pursue improved PGA Tour status via the DP World Tour.”The top 10 players on the DP World Tour’s order of merit, not already exempt, earn PGA Tour cards this year.Koepka was reinstated immediately on the PGA Tour via criteria which applied to major winners from 2022 onwards.The exits of Koepka and Reed leave Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and Cameron Smith as the most significant ­players on LIV.Attention will turn naturally towards if or when that trio seek to beat a path back towards the PGA Tour.

societySee all
A picture

‘You’d be ashamed to bring someone here’: The struggling billionaire-owned high street that shows Reform’s road to No 10

Under blue skies and bunting, the whole of County Durham seemed to turn out for the young Queen Elizabeth II. They lined the streets in their thousands, waving flags and marvelling at the grand royal procession weaving past their newly built homes.It was 27 May 1960 and the recently crowned queen was officially opening the town of Newton Aycliffe on her first provincial tour after the birth of her third child, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, three months earlier. A 16-page commemorative pamphlet, priced at two shillings and sixpence, records the local Light Infantry buglers playing to the giddy crowd.The message was clear: Newton Aycliffe, a town built from scratch from the rubble of the second world war, heralded a new postwar Great Britain, a country that would give its people a modern, prosperous quality of life, free from the squalor of its bomb-scarred cities

A picture

Seven out of 10 UK mothers feel overloaded, research reveals

Seven out of 10 mothers in the UK feel overloaded and almost half have a mental health issue such as anxiety or depression, new research has revealed.The survey of mothers’ experiences in 12 European countries also found that most of those in Britain still do the majority of household tasks and caregiving work alone, and that the UK was among the worst for motherhood disadvantaging a woman’s career.The grim picture that emerged from the report, by the pan-European campaign group Make Mothers Matter, prompted calls for GPs and NHS maternity and health visiting services to routinely ask mothers about their mental wellbeing and provide much more help to those who need it.Make Mothers Matter surveyed 800 mothers in each of 12 European countries about the psychological impact of giving birth and dealing with the pressures of motherhood.It found that:71% of UK mothers feel overloaded – 4% more than the 67% European average47% of UK mothers suffer from mental health issues, including burnout, compared with 50% in Europe as a whole31% of UK respondents felt motherhood had a negative effect on their career, higher than the 27% average, with Ireland the highest on 36%However, it also found some measures by which mothers in the UK find it easier to balance work and caring

A picture

‘Keep slaying the dragon inside’: Simon Armitage pens poem for World Cancer Day

Cancer is a subject the poet laureate Simon Armitage has always shied away from. “I find it very daunting,” he said. “I’ve lost friends and family to cancer.”But when he was commissioned to write a poem to mark World Cancer Day, he was forced to confront the realities of the disease. “I think I saw part of my task as being slightly demystifying and maybe de-mythologising or de-demonising cancer a little bit to myself,” Armitage said

A picture

Pressure grows on ministers to end secrecy over UK medicines deal with Trump

Ministers are under growing pressure to end the “secrecy” around the UK’s deal with the US over the cost of medicines, which critics claim is “a Trump shakedown of the NHS”.MPs from Labour and several opposition parties want the government to publish its impact assessment of the agreement it reached last month with Donald Trump’s administration.Under the deal the UK will pay more for new medicines and let the NHS spend more on life-extending medicines in return for British pharmaceutical exports to the US avoiding tariffs.The deal has prompted concern among health experts that it could cost the UK government and the NHS billions extra a year to fulfil those pledges by the end of the deal in 2035.A cross-party group of Labour, Liberal Democrat, Green and SNP MPs is meeting on Wednesday evening to discuss how to compel Wes Streeting, the health secretary, and Peter Kyle, the business and trade secretary, to publish the government’s assessment of how the deal could affect the UK

A picture

Government row breaks out over plan to cut spending for PE in England’s schools

A row between government departments has broken out after the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) proposed cutting all its funding for physical education in schools.The DHSC is now intending to restore the funding despite insisting privately for weeks that it would end its contribution. Ministers are understood to have overruled the cuts, it emerged after the Guardian contacted the department.The Department for Education (DfE) is also planning cuts to PE from its own budget before changes in the next curriculum review. It is hoped that the changes – which will guarantee at least two hours of PE – will involve partnerships with sports bodies that will deliver some efficiencies

A picture

George Harrison’s old house has an interesting backstory | Letters

Peter Bradshaw missed out an important cultural feature of Letchmore Heath (‘The Village of the Damned was shot here – then George Harrison bought a house’: our UK town of culture nominations, 23 January). Before Piggott’s Manor was sold to George Harrison, it was the preliminary training school of St Bartholomew’s hospital in Smithfield, London, where 18-year-old would-be nurses spent three months before being let loose on real patients – learning how to bandage, give bed baths and change bed sheets with the “patient” still in it (practising on each other), give injections (into oranges), present food in an appetising way and – most importantly – to clean.Following this three-month period, we spent the next two-and-three-quarter years on the wards (as a form of apprenticeship) doing actual nursing work of greater complexity and responsibility. A far cry from the major cultural shift of today’s nurse training spent in universities and on placements.Dr Liz Rolls-FirthCheltenham, Gloucestershire