The world number one, competing at the season-ending Valderrama World Golf Championship ver the weekend, said: "It's between the tour and myself and hopefully it will be resolved.
"We're going to sit down and talk - but I have a few more rounds to play first."
Woods told Golf World magazine this week that his relationship with U.S. PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem had broken down and he was being used to promote the tour without being properly rewarded.
Woods, estimated to earn more than $50 million a year in advertising contracts, suggested he should be awarded a cut of future television rights.
Newspaper reports have suggested that Woods, who has dominated the sport for the past two seasons, could cut his ties with the U.S. Tour and branch out on his own if the dispute was not cleared up.
Finchem, in Valderrama on Friday, refused to comment on the row. Asked about Woods' value to the sport and to the U.S. Tour, he said: "The interest in the game is at an all-time high because it has grown for the last 20 years.
"It's accentuated now because of our current players, headed by the number one player of the world."
Reuters
Tiger Woods plans to meet the head of the U.S. PGA Tour to try to end a dispute over marketing and revenues.






