Phil Mickelson No Longer Affiliated With ‘The Match’

The LIV Golf member is no longer associated with the made-for-TV golf series, according to producer Bryan Zuriff.

Phil Mickelson, one of the leading hands in the original conception of The Match, is no longer affiliated with the franchise, per The Match's creator and producer Bryan Zuriff.

"Phil was a phenomenal partner and he helped build this thing," Zuriff told Sports Illustrated. "He was really good in this show. But he chose an opportunity and has taken a different path. Our show lives on because people like it.”

"Look, we’re in business with the PGA Tour," Zuriff continued. "We’re basically a PGA Tour event. Maybe one day, LIV will figure out their stuff. Then I’ll work with whomever is appropriate.” 

Zuriff, a longtime Hollywood producer, kick-started The Match after he developed a relationship with Mickelson at The Madison Club in Palm Springs, Calif. The inspiration came from The Skins Game, an unofficial money event that the PGA Tour held from 1983 to 2008, which Zuriff’s parents took him to when he was a child. 

Mickelson took part in the first iteration of the made-for-TV series in 2018, when he faced Tiger Woods head-to-head. 

"I had this idea to do Tiger Woods versus Phil, head-to-head, something everyone wanted to see at the time," says Zuriff. "Tiger was just back on tour, Phil had just won in Mexico, so there was some momentum to their relationship."

Mickelson not only played in The Match’s inaugural event, but the next three iterations. In The Match IV, Mickelson’s most recent appearance, he teamed up with Tom Brady, while fellow future-LIV Golf member Bryson DeChambeau partnered with Aaron Rodgers. Mickelson, a three-time Masters champion, officially joined Saudi-backed LIV Golf in June, captaining the Hy Flyers GC team. 

The latest installation of The Match is coming up on December 10, with Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy facing Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth. The four golf superstars will tee it up at 6 p.m. ET at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Fla. Woods, McIlroy, Thomas, and Spieth will play 12 holes, under the lights on prime-time TV. 

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Gabrielle Herzig
GABRIELLE HERZIG

Gabrielle Herzig is a Breaking and Trending News writer for Sports Illustrated Golf. Previously, she worked as a Golf Digest Contributing Editor, an NBC Sports Digital Editorial Intern, and a Production Runner for FOX Sports at the site of the 2018 U.S. Open. Gabrielle graduated as a Politics Major from Pomona College in Claremont, California, where she was a four-year member and senior-year captain of the Pomona-Pitzer women’s golf team. In her junior year, Gabrielle studied abroad in Scotland for three months, where she explored the Home of Golf by joining the Edinburgh University Golf Club.