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LIV Golf reveals official field for 2026 Promotions event in Florida

The annual LIV Golf Promotions event returns in January, offering two league spots. The official field has now been announced.

The 87-player field for the 2026 LIV Golf Promotions event has been confirmed. The tournament will take place from January 8 to 11 at Black Diamond Ranch in Lecanto, Florida. Last year’s edition in Saudi Arabia offered just one league spot, claimed by Chieh-po Lee. This year, with an enhanced promotion-relegation system aimed at gaining Official World Golf Ranking points, LIV Golf has increased the stakes.

Big names headline LIV Golf Promotions field

German-speaking players Maximilian Kieffer and Matthias Schwab will compete for one of the coveted league spots. Also in the field are ten top players from the International Series, including Miguel Tabuena (Philippines winner), Ollie Schniederjans (India winner), and Wade Ormsby (Jakarta winner). They are joined by relegated and released LIV players such as Ben Campbell, Matt Jones, Andy Ogletree, Anthony Kim, Max Rottluff, and John Catlin.

Notable European names include former Ryder Cup player and BMW PGA champion Chris Wood, five-time DP World Tour winner Alex Levy, and former Open Championship silver medalist Tom Lewis. Former DPWT regulars Callum Shinkwin and Lucas Bjerregaard are also in the mix, along with Walker Cup players Dominic Clemons and Charlie Forster.

According to LIV Golf, 50 of the 87 players have won a tournament in the past two years, including 39 different winners of OWGR-sanctioned events in 2025. “The evolution of LIV Golf Promotions reflects our ongoing commitment to creating truly open and competitive pathways for players around the world to compete at the highest level,” said LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil. “It will be a high-stakes, intense competition from start to finish, and we look forward to celebrating the players who earn their shot at LIV Golf’s biggest season yet.”

PGA Tour players still barred

Once again, no PGA Tour players will participate, as the Tour considers the four-day event unauthorized. Any member who competes risks a one-year suspension.

Tensions between the two professional golf leagues remain high. The debate reignited recently when Laurie Canter relinquished his PGA Tour card to return to the Saudi-backed league.