Tiger's win now viewed as astonishing
by Golf guest 19/06/2008, 14:55
Tiger Woods walked tenderly out of Torrey Pines Golf Course with a US Open trophy he was destined to win on a left leg worse than anyone imagined. A group of children called out to him and Woods looked over and waved.
It turned out to be a most symbolic gesture.
So long, Tiger. See you next year.
Woods revealed on Wednesday he has been playing for at least 10
months with a torn ligament in his left knee, and that he suffered a
double stress fracture in his left leg two weeks before the US Open.
He said he will have season-ending surgery, knocking him out of the
final two majors and the Ryder Cup.
"Now, it is clear that the right thing to do is to listen to my
doctors, follow through with this surgery and focus my attention on
rehabilitating my knee," Woods said on his website.
He sure wasn't listening to doctors by playing the US Open, a
victory that now looks even more impressive.
Out of competition for two months because of April 15 surgery to
clean out cartilage in his left knee, he suffered a double stress
fracture in his left tibia two weeks before the US Open.
Hank Haney, his swing coach, was with him in Florida when doctors
told Woods the preferred treatment was three weeks on crutches,
followed by three weeks of rest.
According to Haney, Woods looked at the doctor and said: "I'm
playing the US Open, and I'm going to win."
"And then he started putting on his shoes," Haney recalled. "He
looked at me and said, 'Come on, Hank. We'll just putt today.' Every
night, I kept thinking there was no chance he's going to play. He had
to stop in his tracks for 30 seconds walking from the dining room table
to the refrigerator.
"He was not going to miss the US Open at Torrey Pines. There just
wasn't any discussion."
And it was a US Open that will be talked about for years.
Despite a torn anterior cruciate ligament and a double stress
fracture, Woods managed to win a major that required five days of
flinching, grimacing and a long list of spectacular shots that have
defined his career.
He went 91 holes on a leg that got worse with each day, finally
defeating Rocco Mediate on the 19th hole of a playoff.
"When I talk about golf, he doesn't count," Mediate said on Monday
after the playoff. "He's not normal."
Woods, 32, did not say when he would have surgery, but he cancelled a
clinic that was scheduled for Tuesday at Comerica Park in Detroit.
Haney said the typical recovery is six to eight months. This will be
Woods' third surgery in five years on his left knee.
"There will be debate whether he rushed back for the US Open,"
said Mark Steinberg, his agent at IMG. "But I don't think there will be
any debate that he rushes back from his next surgery. He won't need to.
Augusta is in April."
Woods first went to Haney toward the end of 2002 to overhaul a
violent swing that was putting enormous pressure on his left knee.
Haney suspects the pain has been increasing, and Woods stopped hitting
balls after his rounds at last year's British Open.
"He's been playing way less than 100 percent for a long, long,
time," Haney said. "It has limited him a lot in practice. He's going to
come back better than he's ever been."
Woods was already plenty good, with 65 victories that rank third
all-time on the US PGA Tour, and 14 professional majors that are
second only to the record 18 won by Jack Nicklaus. This is the 500th
week Woods has been ranked No. 1 in the world.
Even in his abbreviated 2008 season, he won five of seven
tournaments worldwide. Dating to the discovery of the torn ACL, Woods
won nine of 12 tournaments, including two majors, and never finished
lower than fifth.
"While I am obviously disappointed to have to miss the remainder of
the season, I have to do the right thing for my long-term health and
look forward to returning to competitive golf when my doctors agree
that my knee is sufficiently healthy," Woods said.
"My doctors assure
me with the proper rehabilitation and training, the knee will be strong
and there will be no long-term effects."
Woods will miss a major for the first time in his career - the
British Open next month at Royal Birkdale and the US PGA
Championship, where Woods is the two-time defending champion, in August
at Oakland Hills in Michigan.
Woods also will miss the Ryder Cup in September, meaning the ninth
player in the US standings will qualify for the team. Coincidentally,
Woods had mathematically clinched a spot on the team by winning the
US Open.
"We sent him flowers for winning the US Open. Now I wish I had put
in a note of condolences," US captain Paul Azinger quipped. "But this
is not about Tiger and the Ryder Cup. It's about Tiger getting better
and his march to history."
The majors won't miss Woods nearly as much as the US PGA Tour -
and the networks that televise it - especially in the second year of
the FedEx Cup, which Woods won in a landslide last year.
He still might be leading the points race in August leading to the
playoffs. Even with Woods no longer playing for the rest of the year,
he will keep his spot in the playoff events for which he is eligible.
"Tiger is our tour," Kenny Perry said from the Travelers
Championship, which starts on Thursday in Connecticut. "When you lose
your star player, it definitely hurts."
US PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem said his concern was for
Woods' health and well being.
"We wish him the best toward a speedy recovery," he said.
Woods is private about his health and personal life, never more so
than at the just-completed US Open. He didn't say anything about the
torn ACL or the stress fractures, and wouldn't say how he was treating
it, only that it was more sore as the week went on.
Perhaps the biggest surprise was when the injury first happened.
Woods said he tore the ACL while jogging at home after the British
Open last July. He played on, going on a streak that included seven
consecutive victories, including the Dubai Desert Classic in Europe and
his Target World Challenge, an unofficial event.
He did not play overseas late last year for the first time since
2003, hopeful that rest could allow him to play more this year. But the
pain intensified through the Masters, where he finished second, and
Woods said the cartilage damage developed from the ACL injury.
He bypassed surgery on the torn ligament on April 15, hopeful that
by cleaning out the cartilage he could make it through the year. What
he didn't anticipate were the stress fractures as he tried to get ready
for the Memorial.
"The stress fractures that were discovered just prior to the
tournament unfortunately prevented me from participating and had a huge
impact on the timing for my return," Woods said. "I was determined,
though, to do everything and anything in my power to play in the US
Open at Torrey Pines, which is a course that is close to where I grew
up and holds many special memories for me."
Woods won for the eighth time at the public golf course in San Diego
- a US Open, a record six times at the Buick Invitational, and a
Junior World Championship as a teenager.
He called his U.S. Open victory "probably the best ever."
On Wednesday, he explained why.