Tiger Woods has announced he'll compete at next week's Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, the 15-time major champion's first PGA Tour event in five months.
"I'm looking forward to playing in the @MemorialGolf next week," Woods said on his Twitter account.
"I've missed going out and competing with the guys and can't wait to get back out there."
Woods last competed on the PGA Tour in mid-February when he laboured through a final-round 77 at the Genesis Invitational where he finished last among players who made the cut.
The 44-year-old reigning Masters champion then skipped a number of events with back issues prior to the PGA Tour's three-month Covid-19 hiatus that began in mid-March and opted to sit out the circuit's first five events since the break.
Woods, who is one win shy of a record-breaking 83 PGA Tour victories, did play a May 24 charity match with Phil Mickelson and Super Bowl-winning quarterbacks Tom Brady and Peyton Manning.
The Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village is one of the most high-profile, non-major events on the PGA Tour and Woods has triumphed there a record five times, most recently in 2012.
Woods will be part of a loaded field that also includes world number one Rory McIlroy, five-time major champion Phil Mickelson, 2018 Memorial champion Bryson DeChambeau and major winners Dustin Johnson and Sergio Garcia.
The July 16-19 tournament was originally supposed to have a limited number of spectators but earlier this week the PGA Tour scrapped plans to let fans attend due to COVID-19.
Related Articles

Scheffler joins Tiger as repeat winner at Memorial

Playing From The Tips Ep.116: US Open and Meijer LPGA Classic

McIlroy explains his silence over failed driver test
Latest News

Spring into golf: Inside our must-read September 2025 edition

How to watch big-time golf on TV this week

The Thing About Golf: #145 Michele Watts
Most Read
.jpg&h=115&w=225&c=1&s=1)
Turf War: Victoria and Cheltenham in battle over public track's new lease

RANKING: Australia's Top-100 Public Access Courses for 2025

Golf's No.1 storms home for fifth title of the year
