Rory McIlroy has told his friend Ian Poulter that he was wrong to take his home circuit to court in order to be reinstated in this week's Scottish Open, saying that such action by the Saudi rebels will only fuel "resentment" among the pros on the traditional tours.
Poulter, 46, won an injunction on Monday against the DP World Tour - formerly the European Tour - to earn a temporary reprieve on the one-week ban that he and 16 other pros suffered for appearing in the first $25milion LIV Golf Series event last month.
Yet, while the Englishman expressed his pleasure at the verdict on Tuesday, McIlroy signified his opposition to those who signed multi-million dollar contracts with LIV appearing at the $8m tournament at the Renaissance Club, which starts at the North Berwick links on Thursday. "I think at this stage, if you've gone over to play on another tour then go and play on that tour," McIlroy told the BBC. "You've basically left all your peers behind to make more money, which is fine. "But just stay over there.
Don't try to come back and play over here again. The whole cake-and-eat-it type of attitude is what the resentment stems from within the PGA Tour and DP World Tour membership.