According to Andrew Beaton of The Wall Street Journal, Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is expected to stop funding LIV Golf after this season – a potential death blow to the league that spent billions trying to “disrupt” professional golf.

Notably, Yasir Al-Rumayan, the governor of the Saudi’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), has stepped down from his role as chairman of the league’s board.

This was his baby, and the move feels like a pretty good sign that things at LIV are coming to an end.

LIV, naturally, is framing things a little differently.

In its official statement, the league said it is moving from a “foundational launch phase” into a “diversified, multi-partner investment model,” with a new independent board led by Gene Davis and Jon Zinman.

Corporate Mumbo Jumbo Translation: LIV says it is not dead – it is looking for new money.

The problem is that new money may be hard to find at anything close to the scale LIV has been operating on. Huge player contracts, massive purses, and global events do not come cheap, and the league has been almost entirely powered by Saudi backing since launch.

So, reading between the lines on their bulls*t, corporate press release – they will be attempting to carry around LIV’s corpse, Weekend At Bernie’s style, while they try to convince the next investor that this thing is alive, despite having no pulse.

However, moments of desperation often lead to opportunity, and wow, what an opportunity the LIV stars have right now.

Now Bryson, Jon Rahm, Ian Poulter, and Lee Westwood have a chance to put their money where their mouths have been for the last few years.

If LIV was always about growing the game, building a global tour, and bringing golf to new markets, then surely they’ll be happy to keep doing exactly that for a lot less money.

After all, these guys have spent years positioning themselves as golf missionaries — traveling from country to country to spread the game they love. So why wouldn’t they continue the mission if the checks get smaller?

It was always about the golf, never the money.

Right?

Of course, not every LIV player will be so virtuous; there will be some who try to jump ship.

There have already been reports of players contacting the DP World Tour for an opportunity, but LIV players may not have an easy path back to the PGA Tour.

Patrick Reed took the smartest path back, and Brooks Koepka already returned through a one-time program that came with a major financial penalty, but the Tour has made it clear that won’t necessarily be the blueprint for everyone else.

“There were rules, and they were broken,” PGA Tour chief executive Brian Rolapp said before the PIF news on Wednesday. “With rules comes accountability.”

What will that accountability look like?

No one knows, but just like an irreverent 80’s comedy movie, it will be interesting to see how it all unfolds.