Plymouth Township — Thousands of golf fans — and even some who aren’t all that crazy about the sport — made their way to The Cardinal at Saint John’s Resort on Saturday for LIV Golf’s season-ending team championship, and the upstart golf tour’s first-ever Michigan event.
LIV Golf has come to Michigan for the first time this weekend in a big way, with more than 40,000 fans expected for the three-day event, which concludes Sunday.
The tournament, notorious for its out-of-the-box format and boisterous fans, saw long lines at the entry gate, before gates even opened Saturday morning. Most in collared shirts, some in colorful Hawaiian button-ups, but all moving in the same direction to some of their favorite golfers, there was something for everyone.
Especially fitting were the “Zip it” and “Shhhhh” signs marshals held up all throughout the courses as crowds clapped, cheered and yelled for the players.
“It really is kind of a one-size-fits-all event,” said Michelle Dorgan, 51, of Northville, who described herself as a “beginner golf fan.”
Michelle’s husband, David Dorgan, 53, who she proclaimed as the “golf expert,” has been to PGA Tour tournaments including the annual Rocket Classic at Detroit Golf Club, but this was Michelle’s first pro tournament.
David Dorgan said the LIV Golf experience, which on Saturday included massive crowds around golfers like long-hitting Bryson DeChambeau and World Golf Hall-of-Famer Phil Mickelson, was “just different.”
“It’s definitely party-like, it’s way more of an open feel, which is nice,” David said. “It just feels really welcoming.”
Added Michelle Dorgan: “I’d say it’s not an event, but it’s more of an experience.”
Saturday featured the semifinals of the LIV Golf team championship. LIV Golf, launched in 2022, is different than the PGA Tour, in that it has a team element. The LIV Golf individual championship was last week.
The LIV Golf team champion will be decided Sunday, in stroke play. The winning four-man team will split $14 million.
The fan experience featured lots of drinking, rock-climbing for kids, ice-cream trucks and music playing on more than 160 speakers all throughout the golf course. Jets dragging American flags behind them flew overheard as the golf kicked off, equipped with LIV Golf parachutes and even skydivers.
“You didn’t see the skydivers?” asked Brett Jay, 35, of Farmington Hills. “That was actually crazy.”
Jay has been to pro golf tournaments before, but he said this one felt a lot more “care-free.”
“It’s for sure a lot more chill,” he said, “not like the others where the environment feels more tense.”
Jay especially found the skydivers interesting. He said that’s “a first for any golf I’ve ever been to or watched. They’re a lot more hype here, it’s almost like a party.”
For those who aren’t the biggest golf fans, there was something for them, too, on Saturday.
Six-year-old Emmet Gross showed up strictly for the music.
Following the golf Saturday afternoon, Imagine Dragons were set to take the stage between the clubhouse and the 18th hole, for a concert, admission included with every fan’s ticket. The stage was constructed just for LIV Golf this week, even though it’s big enough to look like a permanent amphitheater on the property.
Emmet’s mom, Amy Gross, drove from Chicago because her son is “the hugest, most-obsessed” Imagine Dragons fan and they’ve been tracking their European world tour and waiting for them to come to the U.S.
“I asked him if he wanted a birthday party or Imagine Dragons, and he said Imagine Dragons,” Gross said of Emmet, who was holding a sign reading, “This is my first concert.”
Gross added, laughing, “Their last concert in the U.S. was in Vegas on New Year’s, and I wasn’t about to take my kid to Vegas on New Year’s. But I saw this, and it was perfect, so we came here.”
After Sunday’s round, Swedish House Mafia will perform a tournament-closing concert, which will include a celebration by LIV Golf’s 2025 team champions.
Chelsea Pavuk, 41, and her son, Nic, 16, of Dundy, also didn’t come for the golf, although her husband, Mike, 46, did on a day where even some sprinkles of rain didn’t send the galleries for cover.
“There’s something for us, too, which I appreciate, because we actually came here for our anniversary,” Chelsea Pavuk said. “I was expecting to walk in and find this big serious golf thing, but they literally have everything.”
“I bet you’ve never seen a parachute at a golf tournament,” Nic Pavuk added, laughing. “It’s awesome, I feel like that stuff just gets younger people to come. It’s not just for golf.”