THE MASTERS- Can Tiger tie Nicklaus with 6? Tiger struggles through round 1, tied for 54th

lightbright

Master Pussy Poster
BGOL Investor
CBS Sports' Jim Nantz and Trevor Immelman preview 2023 Masters
The 2023 Masters Tournament is officially underway. CBS Sports' Jim Nantz and Trevor Immelman join "CBS Mornings" to talk about Tiger Woods' chances for a record-tying sixth green jacket, as well as other contenders this weekend at Augusta National Golf Club. Each weekday morning, "CBS Mornings” co-hosts Gayle King, Tony Dokoupil and Nate Burleson bring you the latest breaking news, smart conversation and in-depth feature reporting. "CBS Mornings" airs weekdays at 7 a.m. on CBS and stream it at 8 a.m. ET on the CBS News app.

 
Tiger Woods struggles to worst Masters start in more than 15 years

GettyImages-1480373967.jpg

Tiger Woods analyzes a putt during the first round of the 2023 Masters.

AUGUSTA, Ga. —
Tiger Woods looked like he might squeeze out something special Thursday afternoon at sweaty Augusta National. His scorecard read one over, a great improvement from the middle of his round, as he roasted another tee ball into the 18th fairway. His agent, Marc Steinberg, must have felt the importance of this single shot. He sat in the clubhouse and barked at the bounding ball to slow down. It did, just not quickly enough. Woods’ ball eventually stopped on the edge of the fairway bunker, leaving a not-so-great stance for a guy who can sometimes barely stand.

Woods addressed the ball with his heels hanging over the lip. He torqued his hips a bit, testing the feel of a hook swing. He sat on the decision for a minute or two, then dug the front of his right shoe into the sand and addressed the ball. Then he dug his toes in some more and addressed it again. Woods tried a ropey swing and pirouetted onto his left leg in the bunker, hopping on his left leg and holding his right one in the air.

e wanted to get that ball into the left greenside bunker but it ended in the right one instead. It led to a finishing bogey — his fifth of the day — and a first-round 74, his worst start at the Masters since 2005. So, how about that awkward dance, Tiger

“It’s on my left leg, I’m good,” Woods said. “Hop on the left leg is fine. If I did it on the other one, not so fine.”

Ho hum, I guess. This kind of tricky movement, we’re coming to learn, is just the new normal. Thursday was the 14th competitive round since Woods returned from his car accident. But it may have been a fair sign of what is to come. Woods thinks about that leg and where he plants it every second of every day.

Woods has been battling his body more than he hoped to be recently. He says his golf is in a better place than it was last year, but his body aches more now than it did then. He’s put some miles on it this spring, logging four rounds at the Genesis Invitational. His recovery afterward wasn’t as smooth as he’d hoped. So here he is, laboring a bit more than he expected. Than we expected. But that’s what he’s always done. And probably what he’ll continue to do.

Woods didn’t blame his body for the two-over round, a telling sign that he can parse between where his legs let him down and where his hands let him down. At times Thursday, the hands didn’t look great. The fluffed wedge on 3 that he caught too high on the face: bogey. The shorted flop shot on 11 that ended up in a trap: bogey. His two three-putts in three holes on the front nine: bogeys, plural. Three birdies helped keep his hopes alive.

What Woods has done to his body is just hook himself to a really short leash. He has no freedom to roam like he used to. Every step is purposeful. He nearly crashed into a couple patrons outside the clubhouse Thursday morning on a direct path to the putting green. Unsurprisingly, they thought it was pretty cool — “Oh man, Tiger has that tunnel vision,” they said. In reality, it could have been pretty dicey.

There’s no hitting balls after a bad round anymore. The last time he opened with a 74 or worse at the Masters was 2005. He could hit balls forever back then, a spry 29-year-old. We all remember that Masters, too. Woods grinded back, holed out one of the greatest chips of his life and beat Chris DiMarco in a playoff. Here in 2023, Woods bounced off the property, keeping his time with the press short and sweating like he’d been in a sauna. Warm weather is supposed to be good for him and his tender body. Thursday was the day to show what he’s really got.

“Most of the guys are going low today,” Woods said after. “This was the day to do it. Hopefully tomorrow I’ll be a little bit better, a little bit sharper, and kind of inch my way through it.”

It’s telling that Woods wasn’t resigned to any fate just yet. He’s had slow starts to Masters before. It’s just that the leader of the tournament played from his own group Thursday. He saw it up close, as Viktor Hovland beat him by nine. Jon Rahm and Brooks Koepka did, too. Because of those thoroughbreds and the many others ahead of him, there may be no winning this tournament for Woods. We probably knew that all along. But there is a second round, and ominous weather forecasted for the weekend. Woods is already thinking about it.

“If I can just kind of hang in there, maybe kind of inch my way back, hopefully, it will be positive towards the end.”



Tiger Woods struggles to worst Masters start in more than 15 years (golf.com)
 
Last edited:
Jason Day Reveals Gruesome Reason For Tiger Woods' PGA Championship Withdrawal


n Sunday morning, Tiger Woods withdrew from The Masters, with the 15-time Major winner "reaggravating" his plantar fasciitis foot injury. It was certainly a wise decision from the American, especially when a video surfaced of Woods visibly struggling on the 17th hole as play was suspended due to the severe weather conditions.

Speaking about the withdrawal, Jason Day, who is good friends with the five-time Green Jacket winner, stated: "He looked like he was laboring pretty hard yesterday. It was obviously difficult to watch because he had to come back out and then play through all that yesterday morning, and then he had to take a little bit of a break and come back out and play again."

It's no secret that Woods had the bad side of the draw when it came to the weather, with the 47-year-old forced to return on Saturday morning to complete his second round. He battled valiantly though and, in the process, equalled the record of consecutive cuts made at Augusta National.


Historically, Woods has always struggled with injuries throughout his career, and that led to Day to describe a story at the 2022 PGA Championship, a tournament which Woods withdrew from after once again struggling with his right leg.

Speaking on Sunday, the Australian stated: "I was talking to him at the end of last year, and then he was saying the reason why he pulled out of the PGA was a screw went through the skin on Saturday or whatever it was. I don't know how bad it is this time... it just sucks that he's not here playing."

Asked if he had reached out to Woods following his withdrawal, Day said: "At some point I will. Obviously not today. I'll give him some time. I'm sure everyone is reaching out to him right now. Like I said, you can all see how he's feeling on TV. I don't know what he's feeling internally, how bad it is."

As Woods now rests and recuperates, we will hope to see him at Oak Hill for the PGA Championship at the end of May but, first and foremost, we wish Tiger a speedy recovery!


Jason Day Reveals Gruesome Reason For Tiger Woods' PGA Championship Withdrawal (msn.com)
 
I don't think it matters much anymore about Jack Nicklaus/Tiger Woods comparison; the golf generation of today, their GOAT, hands down, is Tiger Woods. All the young PGA stars of today are Tiger's children, basically, and the best of the best golfers will say that.

Plus with the introduction of LIV golf, will the Major tournaments mean as much as they used to? Time will tell.
 
I don't think it matters much anymore about Jack Nicklaus/Tiger Woods comparison; the golf generation of today, their GOAT, hands down, is Tiger Woods. All the young PGA stars of today are Tiger's children, basically, and the best of the best golfers will say that.

Plus with the introduction of LIV golf, will the Major tournaments mean as much as they used to? Time will tell.

He's obviously better, his body just didn't hold up long enough to pass the record.
 
Back
Top