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Tiger to address PGA Tour players: reports

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Tiger Woods will reportedly meet with PGA Tour players about the rival LIV Golf series. (AP PHOTO)
Camera IconTiger Woods will reportedly meet with PGA Tour players about the rival LIV Golf series. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AP

The biggest name in golf, Tiger Woods, is reportedly set to meet with fellow PGA Tour players regarding the ongoing threat presented by the fledgling LIV Golf series.

According to Fire Pit Collective and ESPN, Woods will be the headliner in a player meeting on Tuesday in Wilmington, Delaware, where the second of the tour's three FedEx Cup playoffs tournaments begins on Thursday.

An unnamed PGA Tour player told ESPN, "It's a meeting to get the top 20 players in the world on the same page on how we can continue to make the PGA Tour the best product in professional golf."

A PGA Tour player advisory council meeting is also scheduled for Tuesday, and PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan is due to address the players separately, ESPN reported.

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Fire Pit Collective wrote: "Supposedly everything is on the table, from major championship boycotts to Monahan's future to a larger compromise (with LIV)."

The Saudi-funded LIV circuit, led by CEO Greg Norman, has pulled numerous star players away from the PGA Tour with nine-figure dollar guarantees. The LIV roster includes Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed, Bubba Watson, Phil Mickelson, Spain's Sergio Garcia and South Africa's Charl Schwartzel and Louis Oosthuizen.

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Australia's Cameron Smith, currently ranked second in the world, has been linked to a move to the LIV tour too, something he has declined to confirm or deny.

After playing last week's playoffs opener, Smith has pulled out of this week's BMW Championship in Wilmington due to hip discomfort but still easily qualifies for the season-ending Tour Championship in Atlanta.

Players who have competed in LIV events were suspended by the PGA Tour, and last week a California court sided with the PGA Tour in its decision to ban LIV players from the FedEx Cup playoffs.

Woods publicly backed the PGA Tour amid a flood of defections earlier this summer, saying ahead of the British Open, "I disagree with (players jumping to LIV). I think that what they've done is they've turned their back on what has allowed them to get to this position. ...

"Some of these players may not ever get a chance to play in major championships. That is a possibility. We don't know that for sure yet. It's up to all the major championship bodies to make that determination. But that is a possibility that some players will never, ever get a chance to play in a major championship, never get a chance to experience (the Open Championship), walk down the fairways at Augusta National. That, to me, I just don't understand it."

Woods declined an offer of about $A1 billion to join LIV, Norman said in a Fox News interview this month.

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