
Estimated Read Time: 9 minutes
The world of professional golf is undergoing a seismic shift. While tradition has long been the sport's calling card, a new challenger is rewriting the rulebook. LIV Golf—the upstart league that's barely four years old—is taking an unconventional approach, combining team competition, cutting-edge technology, and storytelling to make the sport more compelling for a new generation.
Scott O'Neil, the former sports executive who led the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils, now serves as CEO of LIV Golf. In a recent conversation, he revealed how the league is leveraging everything from AI-powered shot tracking to athlete wellness optimization—and why he believes golf is uniquely positioned for a technological revolution.
But this isn't just a story about innovation. It's about challenging an entrenched incumbent, building community through sport, and understanding that people don't fall in love with statistics.
They fall in love with stories.
The Team Golf Experiment: Solving Golf's Relatability Problem
Traditional professional golf has a fundamental challenge: it's an individual sport in an era that craves shared experiences. LIV Golf's answer is deceptively simple—add teams.
"There's an intimacy in team sports that you don't get in individual sports," O'Neil explains. The league structures competition around team dynamics, creating natural storylines and emotional investments that go beyond a single player's performance.
The format creates unexpected moments of humanity. O'Neil recalls a tournament at Valderrama where Mexican golfer Abraham Ancer, leading by four strokes, collapsed down the stretch and finished fourth. His team captain, Sergio García, put a hand on his shoulder and spoke to him in Spanish: "This is how you build strength. This is the fuel. This will never happen to you again. Celebrate this time. Don't ever lose this feeling."
"That's LIV Golf," O'Neil says. "That's team golf. That's competition. That's compassion. That's storytelling. That's all that magic wrapped up in one moment."
It's the kind of unscripted drama you can't manufacture—but you can create the conditions for it to emerge.
Why Golf Is Perfect for AI
Golf might seem like a gentleman's sport rooted in tradition, but O'Neil sees something different: a game drowning in variables—which makes it ideal for artificial intelligence.
Consider the mechanics. A one-degree change in club face angle alters the ball's trajectory. Wind gusts at 30 miles per hour transform every calculation. Factors like spin rate, club speed, launch angle, and landing conditions all interact in complex ways. A golfer can spend two hours at the range perfecting their swing, only to face completely different conditions on the course.
"I think this is a game that's made for AI," O'Neil says. "All these variables that you wouldn't—you can go to the range and hit for two hours and then there are wind gusts blowing at 30, and that completely changes everything."
LIV Golf has already implemented technology that would have seemed impossible a decade ago. Through their app, fans can watch any shot that any player hits during a tournament—on demand, in real-time, with zero human intervention in the pipeline. It's powered entirely by AI.
For players, technology is transforming preparation and performance. Augmented reality applications are becoming common in professional football for quarterbacks and in hockey for goalies. In golf, systems like Trackman measure every aspect of a shot with precision, giving players instant feedback on what's working and what isn't.
The implications go beyond entertainment. When you can analyze thousands of shots across varying conditions, patterns emerge that even the most experienced coach might miss.
From Hot Dogs to Biohacking
The transformation of professional athletes over the past few decades tells its own story. O'Neil remembers his first day with the New Jersey Nets, when iconic point guard Pearl Washington was at the hot dog stand before a game.
"I'm like, what world am I in?" he recalls, laughing.
Today's athletes are different. They're optimized, monitored, and fine-tuned. Even golfers—who for years were seen as casual athletes—have transformed their approach.
Compare that to Phil Mickelson, who at 55 has the physique of a finely-tuned athlete and has even created his own wellness company. The shift reflects a broader trend: AI and data analytics are identifying injury vulnerabilities, optimizing sleep patterns, and customizing nutrition plans.
Golf, surprisingly, has injury concerns that benefit from this precision. Wrists, elbows, shoulders, and backs all face strain from the repetitive motion and torque of the golf swing. Technology can now predict when players are most vulnerable and adjust training accordingly.
It's not about creating cyborgs. It's about extending careers and helping athletes perform at their peak without breaking down. The difference between a 40-year-old golfer today and one from two decades ago isn't just physical—it's informational.
The Business of Disruption
Being a challenger to an established incumbent isn't just about having good ideas. It's about building a sustainable business model while staying true to a larger mission.
"We're trying to change the face of sports," O'Neil states plainly. He points to how other major sports have evolved: baseball adding a pitch clock, basketball eliminating the hand check, hockey creating three-on-three overtime. Golf, he believes, is ripe for similar transformation.
LIV Golf's business model follows the traditional sports playbook: ticket sales, premium experiences, sponsorships, and television rights. But O'Neil is clear about their strategy.
We are not going to cut our way to success. We're going to sell our way to success.
The league carries relatively high structural costs, which means growth comes from building audience, not reducing expenses. Premium experiences are a key differentiator—O'Neil describes the live event atmosphere as "nothing like it" and eagerly invites newcomers to attend.
Television and streaming matter enormously. The league recently launched "LIV to Win," a documentary series on FS1 designed to showcase the human stories behind the competition. O'Neil admits the first season wasn't perfect—it lacked major stars like Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm, and Phil Mickelson—but season two will feature the league's biggest names when it launches February 1st.
Honestly though, this is where things get interesting. Challenger brands don't succeed by being slightly better versions of the incumbent. They succeed by being fundamentally different. The question isn't whether LIV Golf can match the PGA Tour's prestige—it's whether they can create something the Tour can't easily replicate.
Why Sports Still Matter in an AI World
There's an intangible quality to sports that technology can enhance but never replace. O'Neil keeps returning to this idea: people fall in love with stories, not statistics.
"When a high school team wins the state championship, the whole community lifts up," he observes. "You take a step back and you're like, how is this possible?"
He recalls how the Golden State Warriors' "Splash Brothers" era lifted the entire Bay Area. A basketball team created collective joy across millions of people—illogical, perhaps, but undeniably real.
Golf embodies values that O'Neil believes the world needs more of: integrity (it's the only self-scored sport where players self-report penalties), resilience, consistency, and community. These aren't just marketing points—they're woven into the sport's fabric.
"If you play with me, you'll learn resilience," he jokes, "because I'm in trouble all the time."
The challenge—and opportunity—is using technology to amplify these stories. Agent-based AI, advanced analytics, and immersive content can help fans connect with athletes as humans, not just performers. In an era where AI can generate infinite content, the unscripted drama of real competition becomes even more valuable.
Here's the thing: we're entering a period where synthetic content will be everywhere. Text, images, video—all generated on demand. In that world, what can't be faked becomes precious. You can't fake Abraham Ancer's heartbreak at Valderrama. You can't generate Sergio García's compassion in that moment.
That's the bet LIV Golf is making.
The Long Game
LIV Golf is four years old, competing against institutions with centuries of history. The league faces skepticism, structural challenges, and the enormous task of changing consumer behavior.
But O'Neil seems energized rather than daunted. His background in sports leadership—from the 76ers to the Devils—taught him that transformation takes time, conviction, and a willingness to make mistakes in public.
The first season of their documentary series wasn't perfect. Their team format is still being refined. They're still figuring out how to tell stories that resonate across generations and cultures.
Yet they're learning, iterating, building. They're using AI not as a gimmick but as a tool to solve real problems: How do you let fans watch every shot? How do you optimize athlete performance? How do you make a four-hour golf tournament engaging for someone with a two-minute attention span?
The answers aren't fully formed yet. But the questions are the right ones.
Golf has always been a game of incremental improvement, of learning from each round, of understanding that perfection is impossible but progress is always within reach. LIV Golf is applying that same philosophy to building a league.
Whether they succeed in transforming professional golf remains an open question. But they're asking what innovation looks like when you combine tradition with technology, individual excellence with team dynamics, and reverence for the past with hunger for the future.
And if they can answer those questions—if they can make golf feel urgent and communal and modern without losing what makes it golf—well, that might be the most compelling story of all.

Nick Wentz
I've spent the last decade+ building and scaling technology companies—sometimes as a founder, other times leading marketing. These days, I advise early-stage startups and mentor aspiring founders. But my main focus is Forward Future, where we’re on a mission to make AI work for every human.
👉 Connect with me on LinkedIn

