LOS ANGELES.- The golf star Tiger Woods He said this Tuesday that he still does not have a precise date to return to the competition, but he refused to rule out his presence in the Augusta Masters of April.
The 50-year-old American underwent lumbar disc replacement surgery last October, the latest in a series of operations and injuries that have kept him out of action since the British Open July 2024.
“I keep trying every day, I keep progressing,” Woods said in his traditional press conference as host of the tournament. Genesis Invitational in Los Angeles, California.
“I’m still working on it, trying to gain strength, trying to increase my body’s resistance and trying to reach a level that allows me to play at the highest level again,” said the winner of 15 Grand Slam tournaments.
Woods was satisfied with his progress, but did not want to give an estimated date for his return to the fields, although he did not rule out that it could occur at the Augusta Masters, the first Grand Slam event of the year, which will be held from April 9 to 12.
That participation is not “out of the question”, he limited himself to saying before the media present in the field. Riviera Country Club.
Case of LaLiga and piracy
The Spanish soccer league announced this Tuesday that it had obtained in court recognition of the responsibility of VPN services in the illegal broadcast of matches over the Internet and required them to block access to IP addresses identified as potential broadcasters.
LaLiga and the giant Telephone They stated in a statement that they had been informed “of several orders from the Commercial Court No. 1 of Córdoba”, which granted them “the precautionary measures requested against NordVPN and ProtonVPN, recognizing the responsibility of these technological intermediaries in the process of pirating LaLiga matches.
The two companies must thus adopt “appropriate measures” to make “inaccessible” the IP addresses identified as responsible for having illegally broadcast matches from the Spanish championship.
The orders cited in the statement also recognize VPN service providers as “technological intermediaries, which are within the application of the European Digital Services Regulation” and, therefore, obliged to prevent the commission of infringements through their infrastructures.