From the sublime to the ridiculous: Tiger Woods’ Masters moments
Tiger Woods revealed on Tuesday that he plans to compete in the 86th Masters this week.
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Tiger Woods revealed on Tuesday that he plans to compete in the 86th Masters this week.
Tiger Woods plans to play the 86th Masters starting Thursday at Augusta National, making an incredible return to competition 14 months after suffering severe right leg injuries in a car crash. "As of right now, I am going to play," Woods said. The 15-time major champion plans to play a nine-hole practice round on Wednesday and will make a final decision after seeing how his body recovers from that effort.
They’re always tweaking, tinkering and sometimes even tunneling at Augusta National.
Tiger Woods surprised golf fans when he announced last week that he could compete at the Augusta National, the first men's major of 2022, just 14 months after suffering life-threatening injuries due to a car crash. It could turn out to be true as spectators witnessed the legendary golfer practice on Monday. The prospect of an astonishing comeback by the 46-year-old US star, who says it will be a "game-time decision" if he tees off Thursday, built an electric atmosphere at the famed course, which welcomed a full crowd for the first time since Woods' 2019 win due to Covid-19 limits.
AUGUSTA, Ga. : Twice major winner Sandy Lyle wanted to make sure Collin Morikawa was not caught off guard for his British Open title defence in July so gave the world number three a "history lesson" on Wednesday about the tournament's hardware.
Three-time champion Phil Mickelson, embroiled in controversy over his comments on a Saudi-backed rival league to the PGA Tour, opted not to play in the 86th Masters, Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley said Wednesday.
Tiger Woods has talked the talk, now he'll have to walk the walk as he chases a record-tying sixth Masters title only 14 months after suffering severe leg injuries in a car crash. Woods played the back nine at hilly Augusta National on Wednesday in a final practice round before Thursday's start of the 86th Masters, making one last test of his surgically repaired right leg. "I don't have any qualms about what I can do physically from a golf standpoint. It's now walking is the hard part," Woods said.
Money has been pouring in at sportsbooks around the nation on long shot Tiger Woods to win the Masters.