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Compounding Woods' problems on the course is his health, which has put his schedule in flux.
Woods said during Monday's news conference that his neck started bothering him two weeks before the Masters. He brushed it off as "no big deal" and believed he could play through the pain. That changed on Sunday at The Players Championship, where his creaky neck locked up and prevented him from making his usual forceful turn on the ball on even a routine shot.
Woods, who was in suburban Philadelphia to promote this summer's AT&T National, said he's been taking anti-inflammatory drugs, but they have not helped. He plans to have an MRI when he returns to Orlando, and was noncommittal about playing the U.S. Open on June 17-20.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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