Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

Charl Schwartzel of South Africa shot a 5-under-par 65 on Thursday to become the first ever opening-round leader of a LIV Golf Invitational Series event, although it was the controversial tour itself that pushed itself further under the microscope.

Schwartzel, the 2011 Masters champion, leads by one stroke over fellow South African and "Stinger GC" teammate Hennie du Plessis at London. Tied for third were Scott Vincent of Zimbabwe and Phachara Khongwatmai of Thailand at 3-under 67.

The Saudi-financed golf league is seen as a rival to the PGA Tour and has garnered criticism for attempting to help "sportswash" Saudi Arabia's human rights record.

The PGA Tour suspended 17 current and former members Thursday for playing the inaugural LIV event. Many players applied for a "conflicting-event release" from the PGA Tour to play at Centurion Club this weekend, were denied and chose LIV anyway.

LIV nonetheless attracted several of the most recognizable names in golf, including Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Sergio Garcia of Spain and Louis Oosthuizen of South Africa, offering purses far exceeding those found on the PGA Tour. The London Invitational's purse is $20 million, with $4 million awarded for first place.

LIV Golf features three-round tournaments with an individual and a team component. Player fields will be divided into teams of three every week via a draft. The three teams with the best combined scores for the week will earn additional prize money.

The all-South African Stinger GC (9 under) has a hefty six-stroke advantage on the team leaderboard thanks to Schwartzel and du Plessis. Branden Grace (2 under) and Oosthuizen (2 over) make up the rest of the team.

Tied for second were Hyflyers GC and Crushers GC at 3 under.

Mickelson, playing his first tournament since early February, rebounded from a double bogey to shoot a 1-under 69. Johnson also carded a 69.

Mickelson had gone on hiatus for several months after comments he made to author Alan Shipnuck about LIV that were revealed in February. Mickelson called the Saudis "scary (expletives) to get involved with" and admitted the country had a bad human rights record, but said he planned to deal with them anyway as a leverage play on the PGA Tour.

Shipnuck released an unauthorized Mickelson biography last month. The longtime golf journalist said Thursday on social media that, after receiving a credential to cover the event, he was "physically removed" from Mickelson's post-round press conference.

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