Peter Uihlein. LIV Golf

Peter Uihlein has withdrawn his name from the LIV Golf lawsuit against the PGA Tour, leaving just two of the original 11 players attached to the legal battle.

In a 105-page complaint filed in early August of 2022, Uihlein joined Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau, Talor Gooch, Hudson Swafford, Matt Jones, Abraham Ancer, Carlos Ortiz, Ian Poulter, Pat Perez and Jason Kokrak in challenging their suspensions by the PGA Tour for joining LIV Golf. However, in a filing with the United States District Court in San Jose Thursday, Uihlein was granted voluntary dismissal as a plaintiff.

Nine of the players have now dropped out, most citing LIV’s entrance as an interested party in the case in late August as the impetus. The organisation is claiming it has had to start its league in the face of reduced access to players with super-competitive costs. LIV Golf wants “punitive damages for the PGA Tour’s bad faith and egregious interference with LIV Golf’s contractual and perspective business relationships”.

With Uihlein’s departure, only DeChambeau and Jones remain on the suit. DeChambeau said last autumn he remains on the lawsuit because the tour owes him money for making its Player Impact Programme, but added: “It’s not about the money; it’s about the principle. It’s the way you deal with situations.”

The tour is adamant it has the legal authority to issue disciplinary measures and filed a countersuit last September, accusing the LIV-backed lawsuit as a “cynical effort to avoid competition and to freeride off of the tour’s investment in the development of professional golf.”

Uihlein, 33, was a highly touted amateur that made 126 career starts on tour, his best finish a third place at the 2021 team-centric Zurich Classic. Since moving to LIV, Uihlein has found more success, finishing third in the individual standings during LIV’s inaugural season and is currently second in individual points this year.