Bryson DeChambeau has committed to completing the final year of his original LIV Golf deal, passing a PGA Tour return deadline for recent major winners. In Saudi Arabia to start his fourth season with LIV, he reflects on past conversations about expanding his media influence beyond traditional tours. DeChambeau envisions a future where golfers gain more control over media rights, drawing parallels to Arnold Palmer's legacy.
Bryson DeChambeau arrived in Saudi Arabia this week to begin his fourth year with LIV Golf, solidifying his dedication despite a recent opportunity to rejoin the PGA Tour. The PGA Tour had opened a pathway for recent major winners, including DeChambeau, Jon Rahm, and Cam Smith, to return easily by Monday's deadline, following Brooks Koepka's precedent. With that window now closed, DeChambeau plans to fulfill his existing LIV contract through its term.
Reflecting on his career trajectory, DeChambeau revisited a July conversation during a practice round in England, where he discussed his YouTube ventures and broader media strategies. He emphasized providing value to golf over mere marketability, citing Arnold Palmer as an inspiration. "What Arnold Palmer did? He created a Golf Channel! Like, he was so much more outside of just playing golf and winning golf tournaments that probably was more meaningful, in a sense, in his career and his legacy and his footprint, than him actually winning tournaments," DeChambeau said.
His YouTube channel, with over 2.5 million subscribers—surpassing the combined totals of the PGA Tour and LIV Golf—operates on a favorable 50-50 revenue split or better. After initial investments that put him "in the red," DeChambeau now employs a staff of 10. He spends one to two off-week days producing content, including "Break 50" series featuring figures like Donald Trump and Steph Curry, which rival tournament rounds in effort.
DeChambeau has floated the idea of exclusively streaming his golf on YouTube post-LIV, a notion he shared in January and confirmed privately months earlier. "If I wasn’t playing tournament golf, I could do 3X the amount of YouTube videos," he noted, inspired by creators like MrBeast and Dude Perfect.
Critiquing the PGA Tour's media model as once "monopolistic," DeChambeau praised its $1 billion annual TV rights revenue while advocating for reforms. Last summer, the Tour relaxed rules, allowing individual practice-round content without prior approval. He seeks dialogue with leaders like PGA Tour's Brian Rolapp, Augusta National's Fred Ridley, and CBS's Sellers Shy to integrate player-driven media. "I wish more people would just call me, you know? Just talk to me," DeChambeau expressed.
Having posted his full 2024 U.S. Open final round online, he urges testing new structures. "I know the value that could be created if it’s set up correctly in the media structure," he said, aiming for a collaborative evolution in golf's media landscape as his LIV season unfolds.