• Loading stock data...
Thursday, May 16, 2024
Law

Tiger Woods Deposition Delayed in Florida Antitrust Case

  • An antitrust lawsuit against PGA Tour, DP World Tour filed in a Palm Beach County court has quietly progressed.
  • Tiger Woods is at the center of the attempt by Commissioner Jay Monahan and his PGA Tour to kill LIV Golf from its inception,” attorney Larry Klayman tells FOS.
Dec 16, 2023; Orlando, Florida, USA; Tiger Woods walks on the seventh hole during the PNC Championship at The Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.
Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports

Tiger Woods walked into a law firm in South Florida ahead of a scheduled deposition on Tuesday. But the 15-time major winner’s interview under oath was halted by a judge before it began—the latest turn in an antitrust case filed in a Palm Beach County court by conservative activist attorney Larry Klayman. 

“Counsel for Tiger Woods and the PGA Tour—at the last minute, as Woods’s deposition was to begin—objected to proceeding,” Klayman tells Front Office Sports. Judge Luis Delgado delayed the Woods deposition in an emergency hearing Tuesday morning, according to Klayman. (An attorney for Woods did not immediately respond to FOS.)

The attorney, who also represents golfer Patrick Reed, and who is appealing U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Corrigan’s September decision to dismiss the LIV player’s defamation cases, sued the PGA Tour, PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, the DP World Tour (European Tour), and DP World Tour CEO Keith Pelley in June 2022. That lawsuit, which has garnered little attention, predates the biggest legal row in golf history, which pitted the PGA Tour against LIV Golf and its main financial backer, the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia. (That court battle went away in June when a yet-to-be-finalized partnership agreement was reached.)

The claims are similar to those in the original August 2022 federal lawsuit filed by LIV players against the PGA Tour, where the upstart league eventually became the lone plaintiff and alleged the PGA Tour used its dominance as part of a “carefully orchestrated plan to defeat” LIV. 

Attorneys for the PGA Tour and the other defendants filed a motion several months ago to disqualify Klayman from the case, but Delgado hadn’t ruled on that motion. “Mr. Klayman cannot be a lawyer in this case,” Lawrence D. Silverman, one of the defendant’s attorneys, said in a hearing last week.

On Tuesday, Delgado issued a stay in the case until that issue is resolved. According to an August filing in the case, attorneys for the defendants argued that Klayman’s “personal and financial interest in his recovery of attorneys’ fees precludes him from serving” as the lead lawyer if this lawsuit is certified as a class-action case. The defendants’ lawyers also said disqualification should be granted because Klayman could be called as a witness. 

Klayman tells FOS that he will bring on another attorney to represent the class and that Woods’s deposition will likely take place in a few weeks. 

“The bottom line is this: Mr. Woods cannot skate from giving oral testimony under oath for his involvement in the alleged anticompetitive conduct by the defendants, the PGA Tour and Commissioner Jay Monahan, to maintain the Tour’s monopoly by killing a new entrant into the market, LIV Golf,” Klayman says. “Regardless of the class issue Judge Degado ruled that I can proceed as a pro se plaintiff as I am the lead plaintiff, so I have not been disqualified from the case.”

Delgado has allowed for discovery to progress, which includes the depositions of Woods, Rory McIlroy, and Davis Love III. (Love was deposed in December, and McIlroy has a deposition set for February.) Delgado has also allowed discovery to continue on other non-parties in the case, including subpoenas for the executives of golf’s four majors. 

According to court documents, Klayman has sought to depose Woods, in part, because he’s a member of the PGA Tour Player Advisory Council—which is negotiating the partnership agreement that would end the rift in pro golf. 

While much of the case is under seal, and Woods’s deposition transcript is expected to be sealed as well for several weeks, the public filings show plenty of discord between Klayman and the other attorneys. Klayman, for example, has complained in court filings that Woods hasn’t fully complied with his subpoena for documents ahead of the deposition, according to a Friday filing. 

“You seem to have forgotten [the language of the] subpoena and you obviously haven’t carefully reviewed the production,” Mike Ferrara, one of Woods’s attorneys, wrote in an email to Klayman on Thursday. “You continue to make threats and lodge accusations that are entirely unmoored from fact and law. … You have no basis on the merits for complaining about this production, and if you seek to cause our client to incur more wasted costs in responding to your unreasonable demands and false allegations, we reserve the right to seek both sanctions and costs.”

Klayman’s response to Ferrara was sent 10 minutes later: “I have reviewed all. The sanctions should apply to y’all. I don’t make threats because I always do what I say.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

PGA Championship Setting Revenue Records, but LIV Drama Still Looms

The PGA Championship tees off Thursday morning at Valhalla Golf Club.

Caitlin Clark Debuts With WNBA’s Most-Watched Game in Decades

The game averaged 2.12 million viewers, the WNBA’s highest since 2001.

NFL-Netflix Deal Could Set Stage for Mother of All Cash Grabs

The NFL’s leverage with streamers and broadcasters is only increasing.

How the Golden State Valkyries Are Walking the Fine Line of Their Warriors Connection

The WNBA expansion team revealed a new name and logo Tuesday that align with—but don’t mirror—the NBA’s Golden State Warriors.
podcast thumbnail mobile
Front Office Sports Today

Fractured Golf World Unites at PGA Championship

0:00

Featured Today

The WNBA Was Forged in Houston. Why Won’t It Go Back There?

Houston’s a perfect fit for expansion. The league isn’t considering it yet.
May 9, 2024; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) stands with the team during the national anthem on Thursday, May 9, 2024, during the preseason game against the Atlanta Dream at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.
May 12, 2024

‘Perfect Storm’: The Rise of Local WNBA Broadcast Pacts

With national attention reaching new heights, regional coverage could dictate the future.
Mar 29, 2023; New York, New York, USA; American actors and comedians Chris Rock (left) and Ben Stiller sit court side during the third quarter between the New York Knicks and the Miami Heat at Madison Square Garden.
May 11, 2024

The Haves and Have-Nots: How the Knicks’ Celebrity Row Works

Unwritten rules, an expectation of quid pro quo, and nothing is free.
May 6, 2023; Miami Gardens, Florida, USA; Red Bull driver Max Verstappen (1) of the Netherlands walks through the garage area following qualifying for the Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome.
May 5, 2024

Max Verstappen Is Unstoppable. Is That Hurting F1 With New American Fans?

Formula One could be facing an inevitable plateau in the United States.

Careers

Powered By

Careers in Sports

Looking for a new job? Check out these featured listings and search for openings all over the world.
Live Nation
Multiple - USA Careers
Adidas
Multiple - USA Careers
FanDuel
Multiple - USA Careers

NFL Wins Appeal in Jon Gruden Civil Suit, Case Headed to League Arbitration

The case is now headed to the league’s own arbitration system.
May 7, 2024

Another Court Sides With Zion Williamson’s Years-Old Firing of Unregistered Agent

There isn’t a rigorous or nationwide standard to rep a college athlete.
May 8, 2024

Former Ohtani Interpreter Pleading Guilty to Bank Fraud, False Tax Return

Ippei Mizuhara faces up to 33 years in federal prison for his crimes.
Sponsored

Major League Rugby’s Vision for American Rugby

How Major League Rugby is leading the Rugby renaissance in the U.S.
April 26, 2024

Iowa Athletes Sue State, Citing ‘Unconstitutional’ Tracking of Gambling

They claim investigators didn’t get warrants, misled about the purpose of questioning.
April 26, 2024

‘Jaw-Dropping’ Noncompete Ban Could Shake Up Pro Coaching, Experts Say

Many pro coaches are banned from interviewing for other jobs without team approval.
April 22, 2024

Chinese Government Says Swimming Doping Story Is ‘Fake News’

23 Chinese swimmers tested positive before the 2021 Olympics.
April 18, 2024

DOJ to Pay $100 Million to Gymnasts Over FBI Failures

The reported settlement brings victim payouts to nearly $1 billion.