Will we ever see the Tiger of old again?
by Golf guest 09/08/2010, 15:29
Nine months after the secret world of Tiger Woods was laid bare, the revelations that once seemed to come daily have now largely stopped. No more mistresses have stepped forward, and no more apologies are necessary.
Even the tabloids and celebrity websites seem to have lost
interest. The only real questions left are how much his wife will
get in a divorce and when she will get it.
Indeed, these should almost be good times for Woods. The worst
of his humiliations are just a memory, the trips to rehab are
apparently over, and even the British tabloids couldn't beat him
down at St. Andrews.
Plus he's got millions of people who still think he's the
greatest thing to ever hold a 2-iron.
All good, except for one thing. The greatest player of our time
doesn't seem to have a clue on the golf course anymore.
His latest attempt at preserving his name and finding his game
came this week in Ohio, where the best players in the world
gathered for a tournament Woods has owned in the past.
There was once a day - just last year, for example - when Woods
simply showed up at the Bridgestone Invitational, stuck a tee in
the ground, and strolled his way to yet another win.
That day now seems so far, far away.
On Saturday he finished his round long before the leaders even
teed off. By the time he was done he had posted his worst 54-hole
score ever as a pro, and was fighting to stay out of last place.
Someone named Katsumasa Miyamoto beat him by 13 shots on this
day alone. Ernie Els beat him by 11.
You can almost see the embarrassment in his face. To someone
once so dominant he used to intimidate opponents, playing golf
among the also-rans is as humiliating as being caught with a
handful of mistresses in a Vegas hotel room.
Suddenly, his whole legacy is in as much jeopardy as his once
pristine image. Once thought to be a cinch to break Jack Nicklaus'
record and be declared the greatest golfer ever, Woods has lost
both his mystique and his confidence. He now goes into the final
major of the season next week, where the odds are better that he
will miss the cut than win the US PGA Championship for a fifth
time.
And he's going to be making Corey Pavin's job as U.S. Ryder Cup
captain a lot harder than Pavin ever imagined it would be.
Shockingly enough, there's a good chance Woods won't make the
team when the points are added up at the end of the PGA
Championship. Even more shocking, there's a growing school of
thought that Pavin should not make him a captain's pick for the
team that travels to Wales next month to defend the cup.
Tiger Woods not qualifying would have been unimaginable in Ryder
Cups of past. Tiger Woods not being picked to play would have been
utterly unthinkable.
Why all this is happening is pretty easy to understand if you
watch Woods play. He sprays the ball into trees both left and right
off the tee, can't get his iron shots close, and has lost the
magical putting stroke that for years enabled him to get the ball
into the hole seemingly almost at will.
But the reasons behind his demise remain a mystery that Woods
refuses to share with anyone outside his inner circle.
He's 34 now, a time when the putter doesn't always respond to
commands like it did in his youth. He's got a swing that he can't
seem to execute the same way twice in a row. And, unlike times past
when he left his money matters to others when he was competing, he
has to deal with lawyers who are scurrying to find ways to help him
hold onto his many millions.
But there's more. The old Woods was a practice fanatic, working
on his game constantly and almost always on the range or practice
green after a round to find out ways to be even better the next
day.
Contrast that to Friday when he finished around noon, then
almost ran for his car in an attempt to get away from both the
media and a golf game that even he can't seem to stomach anymore.
Mickelson, meanwhile, played late, then hit the range after
shooting a 68.
Barring a miracle next week at Whistling Straits, Woods will go
into the Masters next year without a major championship win in
almost three full years. And, while he stubbornly insists things
are getting better, the scorecards don't lie when they say he's
getting worse.
The forced
smile on his face makes it look as if the fiercest competitor ever
seen on the links has now basically given up on himself.
His game is gone. And the increasing reality is, it may not come
back.
By TIM DAHLBERG, Associated Press Sports Columnist