Miami Herald (Sunday)

Woods will return to PGA Tour at Genesis tourney

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Tiger Woods is returning to competitio­n for the first time without the use of a cart since July, announcing Friday he will play at the Genesis Invitation­al in Los Angeles.

Woods was hopeful of playing next week’s tournament at Riviera, where he is the host of an event that typically had the strongest field of the West Coast swing even before it became elevated with a $20 million purse.

The uncertaint­y came from a bout with plantar fasciitis as he was preparing to play in December. That kept him from playing in his Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas.

He played a made-forTV exhibition over 12 holes and the PNC Championsh­ip with his son. Both times he was allowed to ride in a cart.

Carts are not allowed on the PGA Tour — Casey Martin used one under the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act — and Woods has said he was not interested in using one to play at the highest level.

“I’m ready to play an ACTUAL PGA Tour event next week,” Woods said on Twitter, a reference to playing only three majors last year.

It will be his first regular PGA Tour event since Oct. 25, 2020, when he tied for 72nd against a 78-man field in his title defense of the Zozo Championsh­ip. The tournament had moved that year from Japan to Sherwood Country Club in California because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Woods has said he can hit all the shots, “I just can’t get from Point A to Point B.”

That Woods can play next week is an encouragin­g sign that he will return to the Masters in April, although missing the Bahamas was an indication Woods doesn’t entirely control when his legs and feet will act up.

Woods was recovering from a fifth back surgery in February 2021 when he crashed his SUV on a coastal road in Los Angeles two days after the Genesis Invitation­al, suffering multiple fractures of his right leg and ankle.

ASIAN TOUR

Wang Jeung-hun and Alejandro del Rey both shot 6-under 66 to sit atop the leaderboar­d after three rounds of the Singapore Classic. Englishman Richard Mansell was one shot behind after carding a 65.

Four others were another shot off the pace: Tom McKibbin, Nathan Kimsey, Sami Valimaki Marcel Schneider.

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