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Phil Mickelson (USA, captain)

Mickelson has been at the center of the golfing stage ever since he turned pro in 1992.

In the years since, he has won six Majors – three Masters, two PGA Championships, and one British Open – and finished runner up in the US Open six times.

When he won the PGA Championship in 2021 at the age of 50, he became the oldest Major winner of all time.

Popular and charismatic, he is one of the biggest names in LIV Golf, and despite his advancing years he remains as driven and watchable as ever.

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Brendan Steele (USA)

Steele was a stalwart of the PGA Tour after turning pro in 2005, winning three times. He moved to LIV Golf for the 2023 season, and showed his quality by finishing 19th in the overall standings in his first year.

He followed that up by recording HyFlyers GC’s first individual win, in front of the huge crowds at the 2024 Adelaide event.

That was the year in which he carded an albatross at The Greenbrier, and said: “It was fun to be the first one on LIV to do it.”

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Cameron Tringale (USA)

Tringale, who like Mickelson and Steele is a native of California, joined HyFlyers GC midway through the first season of LIV Golf in 2022.

In 2023, he displayed the consistency that had been his hallmark during 13 years on the PGA Tour. Five top five finishes helped him to a creditable 16th in the season-long rankings.

Tringale deserves to be known as one of the most principled golfers in the game. Several days after the 2014 PGA Championship, he retrospectively disqualified himself for signing an incorrect scorecard – and did the same during the event in 2020.

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Michael La Sasso (USA)

La Sasso joins HyFlyers GC for the 2026 season after a successful 2025 amateur season at the University of Mississippi.

La Sasso captured the NCAA title with an 11-under total, becoming just the second champion in University of Mississippi history and cementing himself as one of college golf’s most formidable talents. His breakout 2025 campaign included First Team All-American and First Team All-SEC honors, finalist nods for both the Jack Nicklaus Division I Player of the Year and the Haskins Award, and the lowest single-season scoring average in Ole Miss history (69.48), signaling readiness for the next level of competition.

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