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    Life after LIV

    Former LIV golfer who spoke out after leaving wins DP World Tour title, moves a step closer to PGA Tour

    March 30, 2025
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    Luke Walker

    Like Laurie Canter before him, Eugenio Chacarra is looking to prove there’s life after LIV. The 25-year-old Spaniard has been playing in DP World Tour events in 2025, largely on sponsor exemptions, after being left unsigned by the LIV Golf League’s Fireballs GC at the end of 2024. That’s how he found himself in the week’s field at the DP World Tour’s Hero Indian Open, where he turned the opportunity into a victory with a final-round 71 at DLF G.&C.C. in New Delhi.

    Chacarra’s four-under 284 was good enough to outpace Keita Nakajima by two shots and post one of just three under-par scores for the tournament. With the win, Chacarra earned full membership on the DP World Tour until 2027.

    "It means everything,” Chacarra said on Sunday. “I decided when I was an amateur to go to another side of golf [LIV]. Coming out [of LIV], I didn't know where I was going to play but I stayed patient.

    "I know when I play my best, I am one of the best players in the world. I've already proved that. It's just awesome. It needs to sink in, but I'm really proud and I'm just happy."

    No. 2 in the World Amateur ranking after his junior year at Oklahoma State in the summer of 2022, Chacarra joined the upstart league and had immediate success, winning the LIV Golf Bangkok title in just his fifth LIV event and cashing in the $4 million first-place prize-money payout. But his success on the tour was limited, and in 2024, after finishing 39th place in the individual play standings, he wasn’t resigned.

    Earlier this year, Chacarra voiced his frustrations with how things played out at LIV. “When I joined LIV, they promised [Official World Golf Ranking (OWGR) points] and majors," he told Flushing It. "But it didn't happen. I trusted them. I was the first young guy, then the others came after I made the decision. But OWGR and majors still hasn't happened. I saw you last year when they pulled the bid. It's frustrating, but I'm excited for the new opportunity and to see where my game takes me.

    "I see what it's like to win on the PGA Tour and how your life changes. How you get major access and ranking points. On LIV, nothing changes, there is only money. It doesn't matter if you finish thirtieth or first, only money.”

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    Chacarra looked like he'd made a good bet on himself when he joined the LIV Golf League in 2022 straight out of college and won in his fifth career start. But his early success faded.

    Jonathan Ferrey/LIV Golf

    While Charcarra—wearing an Oklahoma State golf shirt in the final round in India—earned on €354,641.38 for his victory in India, the DP World Tour membership is his true reward. He can play a full schedule now, and if he plays well enough in 2025 he can work his way up the Race to Dubai standings to potentially earn a PGA Tour card for 2026. The top 10 players on that list at the end of this year who aren’t already members of the PGA Tour earn exemptions.

    It’s a scenario that another former LIV Golf League member found himself pursuing a year ago. England’s Laurie Canter left LIV and returned to the DP World Tour where he has won two titles in the last 14 months. He missed out on a PGA Tour card by one spot off the 2024 Race to Dubai list but move into the top 50 in the World Ranking and recently played in the PGA Tour’s Players Championship, becoming the first LIV golfer to compete in non-major, non-co-sanctioned event on the PGA Tour.