PGA TOUR returns to Trump's Doral course
Digest more
The PGA Tour laid off about 4% of its workforce on Thursday, according to a report from Sports Business Journal.
The PGA Tour returns to the Blue Monster for the first time in a decade but the Masters champion will not tee it up in Miami.
The PGA Tour is all set to lay off 4% of its full-time employees. The Tour informed the sad news on Thursday, April 23, which is set to affect 56 employees globally.
On Thursday, a wave of cuts hit the Tour to the tune of 56 full-time positions, or about four percent of the company's staff.
Beljan, who won the Children's Miracle Network Hospitals Classic in 2012, the last year the tournament existed on the PGA Tour, is in the field at this week's PGA Professional Championship at Bandon Dunes.
The PGA Tour has let go of 56 full-time employees as part of changes to how the organisation is set up. The layoffs make up about four percent of the tour’s global staff, which is more than 1,300 people.
The PGA Tour laid off 56 employees as part of a for-profit restructuring, prompting LIV Golf's Ian Poulter to respond with sympathy for those affected
A multi-year fight over payment for a 15-foot-tall bronze statue of Donald Trump ended. The artist transported it to Florida.
The PGA Tour eliminated 4% of its workforce on Thursday as part of a restructuring process. According to numbers confirmed by the PGA Tour, 56 of the U.S.-based circuit's full-time employees were laid off while another 73 open
There are some big pairings for the first two days of the 2026 Cadillac Championship in
Tiger Woods leads the PGA Tour career earnings list, but Rory McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler are quickly closing the gap.