Tiger's break officially starts
by Golf guest 27/01/2010, 07:24
The player who walked toward the first tee at sunrise on the North Course at Torrey Pines was not accompanied by a security detail. Maintenance workers did not gather on the pro shop balcony to watch him tee off.
This was Nicholas Thompson, not Tiger Woods.
And that's why the "indefinite break" from golf that Woods
announced two months ago didn't really start until Tuesday, January 26.
It has been 53 days since golf's biggest star announced he was
stepping away to sort out a private life that has run amok through
tabloids and gossip magazines because of his extramarital affairs.
Truth is, little has changed during his absence.
At least so far.
The US PGA Tour is only three weeks into its new season, three
events that Woods usually doesn't play. Besides, not as many
Americans watch golf during those weeks, from behind the ropes or
on the sofa. Not when the tournaments are played on two islands in
the Pacific or four courses in the California desert. Not when they
are held the same weekend as the NFL playoffs.
Torrey Pines, however, is different.
It's the first tournament on US network television. It's where
Woods and his chief rival, Phil Mickelson, typically start their
seasons.
How much will the tour miss Woods? Now is the time to start
keeping score.
This is a big week for Tom Wilson, the tournament director of
what now is called the Farmers Insurance Open. This might be the
only US PGA Tour event in history that had four names in the span
of one year - the Buick Invitational, the Century Club of San Diego
Invitational, the San Diego Open and the Farmers Insurance Open.
General Motors filed for bankruptcy, knocking out Buick as the
title sponsor. The tournament found a replacement only last week,
and Wilson is optimistic that Farmers will be interested in signing
on for more than just this year.
It would have helped to have Woods around this week, bringing
the energy and crowds that once accompanied him.
Woods has missed this tournament only once when healthy, in 1997
when he was playing for appearance money overseas and won the Asian
Honda Classic by 10 shots. He had to skip last year while
recovering from knee surgery, although he still managed to steal
some headlines by announcing hours after the final round that his
wife had given birth to their son, Charlie.
Torrey Pines has become the tour's signature stop on the West
Coast Swing, awarded the prime spot on the calendar between the
NFL's conference championship games and the Super Bowl. It's no
surprise that its TV ratings have dwarfed every other tournament on
the West Coast, helped in part by Woods winning five of the last
six times he played.
The difference now, of course, is not only what's keeping him
away but the uncertainty of when he will return.
By now, players have accepted that Woods is on leave and that
his personal life is a wreck. There really is nothing else to say
beyond the daily dose of gossip. What really happened that night he
drove his SUV over a fire hydrant and into a tree? Is he really at
a sex addiction clinic in Mississippi? Did his wife participate in
the program? Does their marriage have a chance?
The bigger question, which no one can answer, is when he will
return.
Rocco Mediate is back at Torrey Pines for the first time since
that 19-hole playoff loss to Woods in the 2008 US Open. Mediate
missed last year with a knee injury, which largely went unnoticed.
He went to the putting green on Monday and told his caddie, "A
little different here." Missing were thousands of fans surrounding
the practice range on the North Course.
Missing was his adversary that day, Woods.
"Yeah, that's really different," Mediate said. "Any time he's
not in the field, it's obviously not the best field we have. You
always want your best guy. It always makes it what it's supposed to
be, especially (since) he's won here 712 times. So it's hard to
beat that guy here."
His absence will continue to capture attention if he's not at
the Match Play Championship (where he returned a year ago) or
another World Golf Championship at Doral the second week of March,
or at Bay Hill for the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
Nick Watney was reminded of his victory last year, when hours
after he left Torrey Pines with the trophy, word leaked that Woods
had become a father again. So if Watney were to win again, could
history repeat itself with another announcement from Woods? And
what would the announcement be?
Watney laughed at the possibility.
"I hope it would be that he's coming back," Watney said.
"Because we need him."