DUBLIN, Ohio ?Adam Scott wants to make it perfectly clear that he isn't suing the PGA Tour.
Scott, the Australian who used the anchored putting stroke to win the Masters in April, is part of a group that has retained a lawyer to look into the situation. Hiring legal representation, he said Wednesday on the eve of The Memorial Tournament, was just a way of not being left out of the loop.
''My intention is just to get all the information given to me possible from the PGA Tour,'' he said. ''And just really, for me, like anyone else in a business, to have some professional guidance on this issue.''
The two governing bodies of the sport, the U.S. Golf Association and The Royal & Ancient Golf Club, have outlawed the anchored putting stroke used by four of the last six major champions. The rule takes effect in 2016 prohibiting players from anchoring a club against their bodies. Those two groups have urged the PGA Tour to join them so that the sport is played under one set of rules.
Scott is just trying to protect himself.
''I don't think I have the ability to get that (information) or ask the right questions, necessarily. I'm not a lawyer. And that's not my area of expertise,'' he said. ''So I just want to get that information and make sure that my views are expressed to the Tour and that's that. There's no intention of filing suit or making problems.''