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Rahm’s DP World Tour appeal may not end before Ryder Cup, says Kinnings

<span>Tyrrell Hatton (left) and Jon Rahm play for LIV and were fined for joining the Saudi-backed organisation.</span><span>Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA</span>
Tyrrell Hatton (left) and Jon Rahm play for LIV and were fined for joining the Saudi-backed organisation.Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA

Guy Kinnings, the chief executive of the European Tour Group, has conceded a crucial appeals ­process involving Ryder Cup duo Jon Rahm and Tyrrell Hatton may not be ­concluded before the event returns next September. Kinnings appears hopeful a deal to unite elite golf can be formalised before then, which in theory would negate the case Rahm and Hatton have against his organisation.

Rahm and Hatton have been ­heavily fined for playing on the LIV circuit without releases from the DP World, formerly European, Tour. In order to remain eligible for the Ryder Cup, the pair have appealed against the sanctions. They can play in Europe in the meantime.

Related: Jon Rahm’s Ryder Cup future in doubt over refusal to pay DP World Tour fines

This backdrop is a messy one for the European Ryder Cup captain Luke Donald. Should Rahm and ­Hatton lose their appeals – as is highly likely, based on precedent – they could be ruled out of Ryder Cup contention. An obvious way around that is to delay the formalities of the challenge until after the US host Europe at Bethpage.

“The lawyers involved will dictate the legal process as to when it gets done,” Kinnings said. “There’s no fixed, set formula to that, and so we’ll just wait and see how long it takes to reach that appeal process. In the interim, the most important thing that we are also doing is continuing to have the ongoing discussions about the future and those may or may not have some impact in that process.

“All I’ve asked them or any other member is work within the rules of the Tour. If you work within the rules of the Tour, you are absolutely welcome at a tournament. I was delighted to see Tyrrell at the Belfry [for the British Masters]. It is fantastic Jon is playing at the Spanish Open. That will make it a better tournament.

“What I’d like to do is have the situation resolved either at appeal or, if things develop in terms of ­conversations around the future of the game, who knows how things may adapt that. So long as it gets resolved one way or another, doesn’t get in the way of what we want to be doing in terms of playing best tournaments, best schedule as we can, make it as good a Ryder Cup as possible. From my perspective, I’m glad that people are wanting to work within the rules as they currently are.”

Kinnings joined representatives from the PGA Tour, Strategic Sports Group and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund in New York earlier this month as the various bodies look to piece together a plan which brings a fractured sport back together. Time is of the essence here, though, with golf’s different bodies currently ­operating on separate paths. “Does it need to happen as soon as possible? 100% and I think everyone recognises that,” Kinnings added. “I think people want to see progress. They all want to get toward a position. We have an opportunity for the game to become united again, to go global but we for sure need to move fast.”

Matthew Baldwin emerged from a 70-minute weather delay at ­Wentworth’s PGA Championship to take the halfway lead at 13 under par. Rory McIlroy lurks just four adrift in joint-fourth after a 68.

Two years ago, Baldwin was working as an Amazon delivery driver. “I remember pulling up to a block of flats, jumped out the van, got in the back and all of a sudden I feel like I’m moving and I’m like: ‘Oh no, forgot to put the handbrake on,” said Baldwin.

“So I’ve ran out the back, ran around the cab, yanked the handbrake up, still wouldn’t stop, yanked it more, it eventually stopped inches short of a blue Fiesta. There was a woman I was delivering a parcel to who watched the whole thing and she said: ‘I couldn’t get my phone out quick enough to film it.’”