IRVING, May 14, 2014 (AFP) - Scott, who won his first major title at last year's Masters, will become the first Aussie to claim the top spot in the rankings since Greg Norman ruled the list for 331 weeks in the 1980s and 1990s.
Woods has been sidelined for more than six weeks following surgery to ease a pinched nerve that caused him to miss the Masters for the first time in his career and has not declared himself a definite starter as of yet for next month's US Open at Pinehurst.
Scott has missed four chances to overtake Woods based upon his performance at tournaments in the past two months, most recently at last week's Players Championship, when he shared 38th and needed a top-16 effort to capture the top spot.
Because neither Woods nor Scott are playing, both will lose points in the two-year ranking system, but Woods -- who is atop the rankings for the 683rd week in his career -- will fall behind Scott when points are recalculated Monday.
Fifth-ranked American Matt Kuchar, the highest-rated threat in the field for this week's US PGA Byron Nelson Championship who could gain points, could also pass Woods on the next list with a triumph in Texas but would not be able to move ahead of Scott's new total.
"I think it's a nice feather in the cap, probably," Scott said last week. "If I was never world number one when I'm this close, I would be disappointed.
"But I would also much rather win the US Open and not be number one at all this year. That's what it comes down to."
Scott becomes the 17th player to become world number one and the fourth to overtake a rival for the top spot in a week when he isn't playing, joining England's Lee Westwood and Nick Faldo and Welshman Ian Woosnam.