The much-hyped $9 million winner-take-all match play event between Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson took place on Friday in Las Vegas, with Mickelson ultimately winning in extra holes.
“The Match” was a $19.99 pay-per-view event through the B/R Live website/app and cable and satellite providers… but Bleacher Report eventually allowed users to watch the event for free due to a technical glitch during the match.
On Friday night, Comcast offered a refund to its customers that paid for the event, and released a statement asking Turner/Bleacher Report to do the same.
Via Golf.Com:
“Comcast will proactively issue a $19.99 credit to any Xfinity TV customer who purchased ‘The Match’ pay-per-view event. We hope Turner and Bleacher Report will do the same given that the event was made available by them for free on The Bleacher Report website.”
And after additional cable/satellite providers did the same, Turner Sports decided on Saturday night to also refund customers that paid for “The Match.”
JUST IN: Bleacher Report issuing refunds to anyone who paid $19.99 for Tiger-Phil event after they made the decision to turn “The Match” on for free. Joins carriers Comcast & Spectrum, who will issue credit to customers.
— Darren Rovell (@darrenrovell) November 24, 2018
Here’s more on Turner Sports’ decision, from USA Today:
An issue with the interface for B/R Live began before Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods teed off on Friday. Turner Sports said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports that it “decided to take down the paywall to ensure that fans who already purchased the event would not miss any action.”
That decision, however, angered those who paid $20 for an event that many watched for free. Mickelson won the winner-take-all, $9 million event in 22 holes.
“This did not impact the live streaming of the competition and fans were treated to an event that was both engaging and memorable,” the Turner Sports statement read. “Unfortunately, the pre-match technical issue did occur, and we will offer fans who purchased the event on B/R Live a refund.”
So, that whole situation didn’t go smoothly, but at least the viewers that paid the $19.99 were refunded in the end.
And putting aside the technical/pay-per-view issues, Awful Announcing’s Phillip Bupp offered five more ways “The Match” could’ve been improved.

About Matt Clapp
Matt is an editor/writer at The Comeback and Awful Announcing.
He can be reached by email at mclapp@thecomeback.com.
Recent Posts
Rory McIlroy naming golf swings is more impressive than winning The Masters
How did he do that?
Denny Hamlin critical of NASCAR on Fox broadcast: ‘There’s absolutely no excuse’
"NASCAR has to get better with that."
Colin Cowherd claims Notre Dame is ‘crawling back’ to USC
"No nobody wants to play Notre Dame."
‘College GameDay’ opens 2026 with Clemson-LSU, followed by Ohio State-Texas
GameDay is returning to both Baton Rouge and Austin for the first time since 2024.
Dan Patrick: ‘My biggest fear is to not be great at the very end’
"I want to make sure that nobody thinks you’re just kind of showing up. That would be the ultimate criticism"
Stephen A. Smith assumes Timberwolves want Victor Wembanyama on court ‘because he’s skinny’
"Because of how skinny he is, you might have some cats that might want him out there."