Bryson DeChambeau open to just focusing on growing his YouTube channel, the majors if LIV Golf ends

3 min read
Bryson DeChambeau open to just focusing on growing his YouTube channel, the majors if LIV Golf ends

Bryson DeChambeau open to just focusing on growing his YouTube channel, the majors if LIV Golf ends

Bryson DeChambeau's future may be with YouTube golf if he ends up splitting with LIV at the end of the season.

Bryson DeChambeau open to just focusing on growing his YouTube channel, the majors if LIV Golf ends

Bryson DeChambeau's future may be with YouTube golf if he ends up splitting with LIV at the end of the season.

Bryson DeChambeau has a game plan if LIV Golf doesn't make it past the 2026 season—and it doesn't involve a quick return to the PGA Tour. Instead, the big-hitting star is eyeing a different kind of fairway: the world of YouTube golf.

Speaking ahead of the LIV Golf event in Virginia, DeChambeau revealed he's ready to pivot his focus toward growing his social media empire and playing where he's truly welcome, should his time with the Saudi-backed league come to an end.

"I'd love to grow my YouTube channel three times, maybe even more," DeChambeau said. "I'd love to do a bunch of dubbing in different languages, giving the world more reason to watch YouTube. And then I'd love to play in tournaments that want me."

This comes after Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund decided to pull its funding for LIV Golf following the 2026 campaign. While the league is framing this as a "strategic transition" and is actively seeking new financial partners, the uncertainty has left players like DeChambeau rethinking their long-term plans.

"I was completely shocked," DeChambeau admitted. "A couple of months before that, it's like, 'We're here until 2032. We've got financing until 2032,' and so I told everybody, and that's what I was told. And then, you know, I haven't had any communication. Unfortunately, things are moving on in a different direction."

For context, DeChambeau was one of the biggest names to make the jump from the PGA Tour to LIV Golf when it launched in 2022. He was also among the 11 golfers who filed a lawsuit against the Tour, claiming unfair suspensions for those who joined the rival league. He later withdrew from that lawsuit, but the question remains: how would the PGA Tour welcome back players like DeChambeau if they choose to return?

Patrick Reed is already planning to rejoin the Tour this fall after a year away from LIV, setting a potential precedent. But for DeChambeau, the future might look less like a traditional tour schedule and more like a content creator's dream—mixing major championship golf with the kind of fan engagement that only YouTube can offer. Whether that means more trick-shot videos, course vlogs, or multilingual content, one thing is clear: DeChambeau is ready to swing in a new direction.

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