McGinley won the Ryder Cup three times as a player and once as captain
Former Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley believes a deal between the PGA Tour and the LIV Golf League could be announced before the Masters in April.
The PGA Tour has been in protracted negotiations with LIV Golfs backers, the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), in an attempt to find agreement on the structure of professional golf.
"The best thing for the game is to come together somehow - its not going to be easy as weve seen, its taken a long time to get to where we are, but it sounds like were closer now than we ever have been," McGinley told BBC Sport Northern Ireland.
"Its not going to start with everybody back as friends - itll be a slow process in that regard.
"But the main thing is to find some kind of umbrella that both tours can work under as well as the DP World Tour and then try to get some kind of schedule out of that.
"Theres going to be something announced and from what I hear, its going to be announced relatively soon, maybe even before the Masters."
LIV Golf was launched in 2022 and has Jon Rahm, Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Cameron Smith and Brooks Koepka among its high-profile list of players.
Northern Irelands Tom McKibbin joined the tour last month, opting to forgo the PGA Tour card he secured two months earlier and going against the advice of compatriot and mentor Rory McIlroy.
Four-time major winner McIlroy has been a vocal critic of LIV Golf but has softened his position in recent times and now believes it is time for golf to unify.
In a step towards that, McIlroy and fellow PGA Tour superstar Scottie Scheffler played against LIV Golf pair DeChambeau and Koepka in a floodlight exhibition match in December.
This month the US Open and The Open announced exemptions for the leading LIV Golf player who is not already exempt for this years championships.
McIlroy played in the successful 2014 European Ryder Cup team captained by McGinley, who believes the sport is not currently financially viable.
"The game has got to come together, its not sustainable at the moment. The prize money is ridiculous. The business model is not producing the money the players are playing for.
"The Saudis have spent $5bn so far with LIV and theyve got limited traction. The PGA Tour is spending more than theyre bringing in and theyre going to run out of runway there.
"So the game has got to come back. Nobodys winning at the moment, except for the players with the huge prize money theyre playing for.
"The sponsors are not winning and the public is not winning because were not getting to see these players play together more regularly and TV is not winning."