Ian Poulter faces surgery after meniscus tear during LIV Golf event in Virginia

Ian Poulter has suffered a meniscus tear that will require surgery, the British golfer confirmed on 29 May 2026, describing the injury as having occurred while he was "hopping up two steps" at a LIV Golf event in Virginia earlier this month.
The incident is more unusual than the typical collision or fall seen on a golf course. Poulter, who turned 48 last November, said the mechanism of injury was undramatic but consequential — a movement so mundane it has drawn a mixture of sympathy and dark humour from colleagues and followers on social media.
"Tore my meniscus hopping up two steps. I need surgery," Poulter posted, in remarks carried by BBC Sport. He did not specify the exact date of the event or which Virginia venue hosted the tournament.
Golf's fracture between the PGA Tour and the Saudi-backed LIV circuit has produced plenty of friction over prize money, ranking points, and appearances contracts. It has also placed physical demands on older players who are competing in more events than many expected when they defected. The relentless schedule, combined with longer drives off tees that place stress on legs and joints, has made injuries a recurring subplot in LIV's three seasons of existence.
Poulter has been a consistent presence on the breakaway tour since joining ahead of its second season. His competitive record — he won the 2010 PGA Tour Player of the Year award and represented Europe in six consecutive Ryder Cups between 2004 and 2018 — gives him credibility within LIV's player roster, but his body is now entering a phase where recovery cycles are longer and surgical interventions carry more risk.
The timeline for return following meniscus surgery varies considerably depending on the severity of the tear and whether a repair rather than a trimming procedure is used. Athletes in their late forties typically face a recovery window of six to twelve weeks before returning to competitive play, though that estimate is subject to the specifics of Poulter's medical assessment.
LIV Golf's season continues through the summer, with events scheduled in the United States, the Middle East, and Europe. Whether Poulter attempts to return before the end of the current campaign, or whether he uses the injury as a trigger to reassess his competitive future, remains to be seen. He has not addressed his longer-term intentions publicly.
The injury adds a footnote to a turbulent period in elite professional golf. The merger talks between the PGA Tour and LIV's investors, which captivated the sport throughout 2023 and 2024, collapsed without resolution. Players like Poulter who committed early to the breakaway circuit have had to navigate the consequences of that unresolved conflict — competing in a circuit with limited world ranking points, reduced major championship eligibility, and a uncertain regulatory future.
The knee injury will not resolve any of those structural questions. But for a 48-year-old professional who has made a career of bouncing back — from missed cuts, from ranking declines, from the relentless noise of the sport's internal politics — the question is whether the body will cooperate with the will one more time.
This publication covered Poulter's injury as a standalone sports story rather than within a broader LIV Golf narrative, given the absence of context around the tournament venue in the initial wire reporting.