
Suspended PGA Tour pro Wesley Bryan is wasting no time reshaping his future in golf.
The 36-year-old, currently serving an indefinite suspension from the PGA Tour, has officially co-founded a new creator-led league called Your Golf Tour. The project, announced alongside his brother George and YouTube star Grant Horvat, marks one of the boldest attempts yet to merge competitive golf with the booming digital content space.
Bryan participated in The Duels: Miami, an exhibition match that involved LIV Golf in April 2025. The PGA Tour deemed his inclusion a violation of its media rights agreement and suspended him, with little indication the suspension would be lifted anytime soon.
Rather than wait for a resolution, Bryan decided to pivot fully into a space he’s been building for more than a decade.
Bryan Turns to YouTube as PGA Tour Future Fades
Bryan and his brother started making golf content in 2014, building one of the most recognizable brands in the space. With more than 800,000 subscribers, the Bryan Bros Golf channel has consistently blurred the line between entertainment and competition.
Now, that foundation is becoming something bigger.
“Competitive golf is where we started. YouTube golf is where we’ve evolved. We believe there’s a place for both. It’s built by the Creators for the audience who has grown with us,” a joint statement read.
“For years, we imagined building a tour, but it felt out of reach. We’re grateful for how much innovation has happened in Golf recently.”
Bryan has openly acknowledged that he was prepared for the possibility his PGA Tour career could be over. His recent comments suggest frustration with how his appeal was handled, noting that communication from the Tour was limited and impersonal.
“We got a response saying they reviewed [my] letter,” Bryan said. “But it was from basically their assistant saying ‘no conversation is necessary.’ That was pretty difficult. Like, why can’t we talk on the phone for 10 or 15 minutes?”
Still, he has made it clear he’s ready to move on.
What Is ‘Your Golf Tour’?
YGT will initially feature 16 handpicked players from across the YouTube golf world, competing in a four-event series designed to bring structure and stakes to creator golf.
The season will culminate in a $1 million individual stroke-play championship at the Wynn Resort in Las Vegas – an eye-catching prize that signals this is more than just another content series.
According to the founders, the goal is to create “high-level competition in the digital golf landscape” while staying true to the style of content that helped build their audience.
The players will still be creators first, but they’ll be competing in a format that introduces real pressure, real stakes, and a clearer sense of progression than typical YouTube matches.
A Direct Response to Golf’s Changing Landscape
Golf has been in flux ever since LIV Golf disrupted the traditional structure of the sport, pulling top players away from the PGA Tour and forcing conversations about money, access, and media rights into the spotlight.
Bryan’s suspension is a direct byproduct of that tension. His decision to appear in LIV-related content, despite knowing the consequences, highlights just how restrictive the current system can be for players exploring opportunities outside the Tour.
YGT, in many ways, is a response to that system.
It offers an alternative lane; one where creators don’t need approval from governing bodies to compete, collaborate, or monetize their content.
Can Creator Golf Become a Real Tour?
YouTube golf has exploded in popularity over the past few years. Channels like No Laying Up and Bob Does Sports have built massive followings by blending entertainment, storytelling, and competitive elements in a way traditional broadcasts often cannot.
At the same time, creator-driven personalities like the Bryan Bros, Horvat, and even major champions such as Bryson DeChambeau have embraced YouTube as a platform to reach fans directly.
YGT fits directly into that shift.
By launching a creator-first league, Bryan and his partners are effectively bypassing those restrictions and building a system that reflects where golf media is heading.
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