The communist regime in China was once hostile to the game of golf, with revolutionary leader Mao Zedong calling it “a sport for millionaires.” After taking power in 1949, the dictator banned all Communist Party members from joining a golf club.
Golf began to have a resurgence in China in 1984. But as recently as 2015, Chinese President Xi Jinping’s crackdown on vice lumped golf in with drugs, gambling, and prostitution.
Xi’s regime also prohibited Communist Party officials from golfing during work hours “to prevent unclean behavior and disciplinary or illegal conduct.”
China’s war on golf seemed to end when the Professional Golf Association signed a 20-year deal with the sports management company Shankai Sports, beginning in 2018, to manage operation of PGA Tour Series-China.
Financing the deal was a $45 million investment from Yao Capitol, a private equity firm founded by former NBA star Yao Ming of the Houston Rockets.
In recent years, China has aggressively used sports to expand its global influence, and will host the Winter Olympics, which open Friday.
But four years into the deal, the nonprofit PGA Tour Inc. still hasn’t provided adequate transparency about doing business in China, the National Legal and Policy Center alleges.
The conservative ethics watchdog group says it intends to file a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service.
“The sports leagues are given monopoly power; in this case, the PGA has monopoly power over the sport of golf,” Tom Anderson, director of the National Legal and Policy Center’s government integrity project, told The Daily Signal. “Sports are how you build a community and build a culture. But you have a nonprofit handing this over to a country that will weaponize it.”
The arrangement is part of China’s playbook, James Carafano, vice president for national security and foreign policy at The Heritage Foundation, said in an interview.
“The Chinese purposefully look to take any national or international institution and essentially make it an extension of Chinese power and influence,” Carafano told The Daily Signal, which is Heritage’s multimedia news organization.
Spokespersons for the PGA Tour Series-China did not respond to phone and email inquiries for this report Monday and Tuesday.
The Professional Golf Association praised the 20-year deal when it was reached in December 2017.
“PGA Tour China is truly thrilled to be partnering with Shankai Sports on the PGA Tour Series-China,” Greg Gilligan, vice president and greater China managing director for PGA Tour, said in a public statement at the time. “Shankai is a world-class organization with great experience [in] connecting the expectations of international sports bodies with an understanding of the Chinese market.”
Nonprofit Status
PGA Tour Inc. is based in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. It is categorized as a 501(c)(6) under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code, which is defined as a business league, chamber of commerce, real estate board, or, in this case, a sports league created to improve business conditions.
As a nonprofit, PGA Tour must file a Form 990 with the IRS in order to keep its tax exempt status. However, the nonprofit doesn’t appear to disclose the deal with Shankai Sports or Yao Capital on its Form 990, which Anderson said the National Legal and Policy Center will ask the IRS to investigate.
Form 990, filed annually, is supposed to disclose financial information, but neither PGA Tour’s form for fiscal year 2020—the most recent—nor the one for fiscal year 2018—the year after the deal—refers to Shankai or Yao.
Part of Form 990 is Schedule F, where a nonprofit should provide information on activities conducted outside the United States at any time during the tax year. The IRS explains:
Activities conducted outside the United States include grants and other assistance; program-related investments; fundraising activities; unrelated trade or business; program services; investments; or maintaining offices, employees, or agents for the purpose of conducting any such activities in regions outside the United States.
The IRS states that an organization answering “yes” to lines 14, 15, or 16 on Part IV of Form 990 is required to provide information in Schedule F.
PGA Tour answered yes on:
—Line 14a, which asks, “Did the organization maintain an office, employees, or agents outside of the United States?”
—Line 14b, which asks, “Did the organization have aggregate revenues or expenses of more than $10,000 from grantmaking, fundraising, business, investment, and program service activities outside the United States, or aggregate
foreign investments valued at $100,000 or more?”
—Line 15, which asks whether the organization reported “more than $5,000 of grants or other assistance to or for any foreign organization?”
PGA Tour’s completed Schedule F contains no reference to either Shankai or Yao. It does refer to spending $805,909 on “East Asia and the Pacific.”
“PGA Tour Inc. ensures that foreign organizations receiving grants are the equivalent of a U.S. exempt organization or an organization whose purpose is in line with the PGA Tour’s exempt purpose prior to distributing grants. Grants are not monitored after insurance because of initial due diligence,” the nonprofit says on its Schedule F.
The PGA Tour Inc.’s principal mission is to promote the sport of professional golf through sanctioning and administering golf tournaments and promoting the common interests of touring golf professionals. This is accomplished by providing competitive earnings opportunities for members of the PGA Tour Inc., PGA Tour Champions, Korn Ferry Tour, PGA Tour Latino America, Mackenzie Tour Canada and PGA Tour Series China; protecting the integrity of the game; and helping grow the reach of the game in the U.S. and around the world.
PGA Tour’s completed Form 990 later makes another brief mention of the China tour:
By managing and co-sponsoring six different professional golf tournament divisions (PGA Tour, PGA Tour Champions, Korn Ferry Tour, PGA Tour Latino America, Mackenzie Tour Canada and PGA Tour Series-China— collectively the PGA Tour), PGA Tour Inc. provides opportunities for the touring professional golfer to compete and earn prize money and benefits while growing the game by exposing it to the general public through their attendance and television viewing.
The Form 990 also says: “These tournaments were played in at least 37 states and 20 different countries in 2018.”
Shankai Sports,Yao Capital
Shankai, a Beijing-based sports management and consulting firm, worked with the International Olympic Committee and two soccer associations—the International Federation of Association Football, also known as FIFA, and the Union of European Football Associations.
“Working with PGA Tour China and managing the series as part of the path to the PGA Tour is a huge responsibility and one we’re determined to fulfill,” Shankai Sports Chairwoman Hong Li said in a written statement as part of the December 2017 announcement. “Shankai Sports has worked with many of the world’s leading sports organizations and we always feel a duty to do our best and help raise the profile of sport in China.”
Shankai’s press release on the PGA Tour deal was viewable in English online as recently as Friday, but on Monday the link did not function. The information from the original release remained available on news sites, however.
Heritage’s Carafano said the Chinese Communist Party has what it calls “civil-military fusion.”
This means that every instrument of Chinese society is intended to perpetuate the goals and interests of the Chinese Communist Party, Carafano said, adding:
The sports institutions are the same way, not even just national ones, also international ones, as we saw the Chinese try to infiltrate [U.S.] universities and try to influence university behavior. They are going to do the same thing with the NCAA, the PGA, the NFL. People famously know about the NBA self-censoring because of their interest in China.
Sports leagues are essentially monopolies, which makes them both powerful and vulnerable, Carafano told The Daily Signal.
“They are vulnerable. In a sense, they have a business monopoly,” he said. “They are, on one hand, invulnerable to external government pressure and, from some respects, market pressure. But on the other hand, they are completely vulnerable to foreign investment and exploitation.”
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