SAN DIEGO >> Rory McIlroy believes reunifying with players who defected to Saudi-funded LIV Golf is what’s best for the PGA Tour membership and “everyone’s just got to get over it” and move forward.

Adam Scott will understand if there’s still bad feelings. He has been thrust into the forefront of such discussions since joining the PGA Tour board at the start of 2024, right about the time the PGA Tour brought on Strategic Sports Group and its $1.5 billion investment.

“I wouldn’t be surprised — or I wouldn’t judge anyone, the members — if reunification happened and they weren’t happy with how it happened,” Scott said, pausing to rub his eyes with both hands before adding, “I hope they’re not spending as much time talking about it as I have.

“I wouldn’t hold it against anybody if there were negative emotions attached to it, the thought of players coming back.”

PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan said reunification was a priority in the tour’s negotiations with the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia. Scott shared some insight on why it has taken time, even as talks seem to be progressing.

Asked if reunification was the only way forward, he replied, “It’s one way forward.”

“But it’s not solely the tour’s decision, you know what I mean?” he said. “There’s two people in this discussion, more to be honest — the DP World Tour, a lot of other stakeholders in the pro game. The tour and its representatives talk a lot about it. But we’re not in control of the entire situation. There’s another side to the story.

“It’s not been an easy thing to solve, otherwise we’d have solved it, I believe.”

Scott has no regrets about agreeing to be on the Player Advisory Council for the first time at age 42, and then winning an election to be PAC chairman that led to being a player director and ultimately a trip to the White House with Monahan to meet with President Donald Trump.

But it’s been a lot.

“I’ll be honest, it took a couple of months to wrap my head around stuff,” he said. “Within the first few weeks of me coming on the board, we’re voting for a minority shareholder to take equity in the tour. There aren’t easy answers to any of this stuff. Everyone is entitled to feel something about what’s happened.

“The one thing I do know is we’re not going to please everyone, but everyone should know that I will stand behind these player directors,” he said “They’re trying to do the best thing for the entire membership. They’ve been faced with some tough decisions the last two years — tough calls, big consequences — for whatever we vote on.”

Ranking updates >> The Official World Golf Ranking might not mean as much to Jon Rahm since he left to join the Saudi-funded LIV Golf, which doesn’t get ranking points largely because its small roster never changes for the entire season.

He hit the wrong kind of milestone, anyway. Rahm fell out of the top 50 this week (No. 52) for the first time in eight years. The Spaniard first cracked the top 50 by winning the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in 2017.

Justin Thomas is slowly trending the other direction. He now has six top 10s in his last eight tournaments worldwide, and his tie for ninth at the Genesis Invitational enabled him to move back into the top 10 for the first time since he missed the cut in the 2023 Masters.

Next up for Thomas is winning for the first time since he captured his second PGA Championship in May 2022 at Southern Hills.