On 25th anniversary of Tiger Woods’ historic Masters triumph, players reflect on what it meant to them and the game of golf

On the silver anniversary, players share memories of the historic triumph of Tiger Woods at the 1997 Masters.

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Rory McIlroy was watching every shot from Northern Ireland.

Jason Day was waking up at 3 a.m. to catch every round in Australia.

Pat Perez was peeking in on the action from Arizona.

Millions of others around the world were sitting in awe, as well.

On TV sets before them was Tiger Woods pulverizing the revered, opulent Augusta National Golf Club’s grounds and demoralizing, as we would come to learn, his peers en route to a ground-shattering romp in the 1997 Masters.

On the silver anniversary of the historic triumph, those who witnessed Woods’ momentous domination of the golf course and his sport continues to resonate.

Twenty-five years ago, Woods was an unrelenting Goliath who crushed all the outmatched Davids. Over 72 holes at Augusta National, where no black man was allowed to join the club until 1990 and all the caddies were black until 1982, Woods changed the landscape, style and future of the game nearly 50 years to the day after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in major league baseball.

Woods forced a significant rewrite of the record books; led golfers worldwide into the weight room; changed the perception of the pasty, stale game; powered the Neilson ratings to new heights; forced Madison Avenue to turn a discerning eye toward golf; altered the fashion of a sport; and ignited a generation of hopefuls who wanted to be like Tiger.

All in 270 magnificent strokes.

1997 Masters Tournament
Tiger Woods gets his green jacket from 1996 champ Nick Faldo after winning the 61st Masters Tournament in 1997 at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo: Porter Binks/USA TODAY)

“He’s Michael Jordan in long pants,” Paul Azinger said that day as Woods wrapped up rounds of 70-66-65-69 to finish at a record 18 under; the field average that year was 74.31. Woods, who was 21 when he slipped on the green jacket and remains the youngest to win the Masters, won by a preposterous 12 strokes, a record that still stands and marks the worst annihilation in a major championship since Old Tom Morris won the British Open by 13 when Abraham Lincoln was president of the Unites States.

“I beat all of us mortals,” said Tom Kite, who finished second.

And no less an authority than Jack Nicklaus put it this way after watching the first Black man win the green jacket in the 61st edition of the Masters.

“He’s more dominant over the guys he’s playing against than I ever was over the ones I played against,” Nicklaus said after he saw a 6-foot-2, 155-pounder with a 30-inch waist break his 17-under Masters record of 271 that stood for 32 years.

And to think, Woods began his first major as a pro alongside defending champion Nick Faldo looking more like a deer caught in the headlights than a tiger hunting prey. He bogeyed holes 1, 4, 8 and 9 on the outward nine in the first round, his 4-over 40 two shots worse than any first nine played by a Masters winner.

But the mixed-race kid with a middle-class background who grew up on a municipal course in the sprawl of Los Angeles resoundingly rebounded with a back-nine 30 to sign for a 70 and stand three shots out of the lead.

“The way he fought, hung in there after a terrible start with expectations on him to perform and to win and he opens up with a 40 on the front nine, he didn’t back down,” three-time Masters champion Phil Mickelson, who missed the cut that year, once said. “He didn’t wilt, he came out and brought his best golf on the back nine and shot 30 to open with a 70 and ultimately won by 12 shots or so.

“It was one of the most impressive performances ever in the game.”

1997 Masters Tournament
Tiger Woods is surrounded by patrons at Augusta National on the 18th hole during the final round of the 1997 Masters Tournament. (Photo: Robert Sullivan/AFP via Getty Images)

Woods’s assault continued on Friday.

As CBS’ Jim Nantz announced when Woods eagled the 13th: “Let the record show, a little after 5:30 on this Friday, April the 11th, Tiger Woods takes the lead for the first time in the Masters.”

He never relinquished the advantage. Instead, he built on it.

The sea of change had arrived and his 66 was the finest round of the second day. His lead had grown to three over Colin Montgomerie, the top player in Europe and the No. 2 player in the world; Woods was ranked 13th.

“The pressure will be mounting on Mr. Woods,” Montgomerie said after his second round. “I have a lot more experience in major golf than he has. Hopefully, I can prove that through the weekend.”

Oops. Game over.

Woods tripled his lead from three to nine with a bogey-free 65 while Montgomerie finished with a 74. The last round was basically a coronation parade, which ended with a bear hug with his father, Earl, who was six weeks removed from heart-bypass surgery. Also on hand was Lee Elder, who in 1975 became the first Black golfer to play in the Masters.

1997 Masters Tournament
Tiger Woods hugs his his father, Earl, after winning the 1997 Masters Tournament at the Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia, on April 13, 1997. (Photo: Dave Martin/Associated Press)

“When he won the Masters by 12, that’s when I knew he was getting ready to take over the frickin’ world,” said Perez, who defeated Woods by eight shots to win the 1993 Junior World Championships. “It was unreal to watch, and then I watched it for another 20, 25 years.”

Woods set off Augusta National’s alarm bells with his shocking power. He averaged 323 yards off the tee on the measured holes – 25 yards longer than the next player. The longest iron he hit into a par-4 the entire week was 7-iron. He twice hit wedge into the green on the 500-yard, par-5 15th – for his second shot. He hit 9-iron into the green on the 555-yard, downhill par-5 second hole – for his second shot. He hit sand wedge into the green on uphill, 405-yard, par-4 18th – for his second shot.

Thus began the club’s alterations to the course – better known as Tiger-proofing. In his first Masters, the course was 6,925 yards from the first tee through the 18th green. This year it will play 7,510 yards.

Woods also didn’t have a single three-putt over 72 holes.

“I had a poster of Tiger in my bedroom,” McIlroy said. “I had a picture of Tiger winning the ’97 Masters and everything that went along with it – the 270 strokes, 40-30 the first day, all the records. I can even tell you who finished second that day. Tom Kite.

“The win made me want to get a Scotty Cameron putter. And Nike golf balls and all that sort of stuff. I wanted to wear a red shirt the last day of a tournament. I got a tiger headcover. He made me practice more. He made me dream.”

The same was true for Day.

“I wanted to go out and play golf every day and do everything I could to play golf for a living after I watched what Tiger did,” he said. “He really got me into the game with the 1997 Masters. He made me wake up and hit golf balls, made me work harder, made he want it more.”

Here is what Woods did to others and what he did for the sport.

Paul Azinger

“(CBS sportscaster) Jim Nantz summed it up on the last green, ‘It was a win for the ages.’ And the ages were the past and the future. And the future has been nothing but bright since Tiger showed up. The money’s quadrupled, or maybe more. And the interest in the sport probably is five to 10 times greater than it was. Nobody has ever attracted more non-golfers to a sport really than him.

“I had a guy tell me the other day that his mom only watched golf when she was alive because of Tiger. She never watched golf until 1997. And there are thousands and thousands of people like that. And so his impact was monumental.

“He pushed players to get into the gym. He had a significant influence on players feeling the need to work out to keep up because he was out-preparing them and his fitness gave him an edge. And he definitely pushed the players to be better in every aspect of their game.

“He looked like a middle linebacker and he wore tight shirts and his reactions were great in a sport that’s so subdued. He was a showman. I would have to say that there will never ever be anything like it again because Tiger just had it all. He didn’t have a weakness. He’s the only player I ever hit balls next to where, after watching and hearing his shots, I scooped up my balls and moved away because he was causing me to lose confidence.”

Rory McIlroy

“He’s been massively important to the game and sport. He’s meant everything. Just start with the prize money, which went way up because of his popularity when he was in his prime and it kept going up. We are still benefitting 20, 25 years later because of Tiger. Every time you see Tiger we should thank him for the life we live because he made the game popular for the masses, made the game cool, brought in more minorities into a sport that is still predominately white. He broke barriers to at least give hope to minorities that golf is a game for you.

2015 Masters Tournament
Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods shake hands after completing the final round of the 2015 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. (Photo: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Sports)

“He’s a guy you can try to emulate, associate with and identify with, and that’s really important. There really aren’t enough accolades for Tiger.”

Brandt Snedeker

“I remember watching him on ESPN and win all those U.S. Amateurs. Seeing how different he was. Just unbelievable talent and being able to do what he did. I remember seeing him burst on the scene in 1996 when he won Vegas and Disney that year. He came out dominating. It was just a different ballgame.

“What he’s done for the Tour is undeniable. The Tour wouldn’t be in the position it’s in without him. He’s been an unbelievable icon of sport, and to have him in golf has been extremely important for the sport’s growth. He pushed everybody out here. He made you reevaluate what you were doing, to make sure you were working as hard as you could. He was doing unbelievable stuff out on the Tour, his physical tools were undeniable, and his work ethic was second to none.”

Pat Perez

“We had a boring sport. And he took it and brought in the entire world and now everybody wanted to be involved in the game or be around him. I don’t think in my life there’s going to be another moment like the 1997 Masters where somebody can take over the game of golf the way that he did. I don’t think anybody would be close enough to do what he did.

“He has influenced everybody that’s ever played in the last 25 years. Anybody in the last 25 years tried to be him or tried to do something he did. And he made the best players in the world work harder and try to get better.”

Pat Perez, Part II

“We had lovely shirts and tan slacks and ugly shoes and visors back then. And Tiger wore Nike. It was so brilliant by Nike to get him. Nike was basketball with Michael Jordan and baseball with Bo Jackson. And now Nike was golf with Tiger. The clothes started to look cool because he was wearing awesome Nike shirts and then he had his own shoes, and it was a cool shoe. Everybody wanted Nike this or Nike that because of Tiger. And MJ, too. And Bo.”

Max Homa

“I’m serious about this: I don’t know if I would be playing golf if it wasn’t for Tiger and how cool he made the game back when I was growing up. The whole landscape of the sport changed because of him. More athletic sport, much bigger sport. He still is the driving force of the game. For me personally, I know a lot of the guys around my age, he was like the reason we played. It was cool to say you played golf because Tiger Woods was playing golf.”

Tiger Woods
Max Homa poses with the winners trophy with event host Tiger Woods following his playoff victory in the final round of The Genesis Invitational golf tournament at Riviera Country Club. (Photo: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

Graeme McDowell

“I was 16 when he won the 1997 Masters. It was at the turning point in my career. I was really just starting to find my competitive feet, you know, and really starting to believe that I could be a good college player and potentially a tour player as well. And so watching him dominate the sport the way did in the late 90s, that was inspiring to me. He was certainly one of my heroes and a guy that really made golf cool and athletic and sexy and just all the things you wanted to be a part of. He made me work my tail off at a very important time in my life.”

Viktor Hovland

“The earliest memories I kind of have that he had an impact on me was just kind of sitting in class and we had school computers, and I would just watch his highlights all day. That’s kind of how his influence has kind of affected me. I was probably 12. It was kind of just an overall motivator, just like seeing what he did on the course, and he had such charisma, the way he did it, the fist pumps, and obviously hitting the shots out of the rough and slicing around trees. It just motivated me just to play golf and have fun essentially.”

Billy Horschel

“He’s done everything for the game. Jack and Arnie did so much, but Tiger made golf cool. He made people think of a golfer as an athlete instead of a fat, chubby guy who drinks a lot and smokes a lot and likes to party. There are still guys who like to drink, who like to party, but there are more athletic guys now than there’s ever been in this game of golf. And he did so much more. There isn’t one aspect of the game that he hasn’t had his hand in in changing.”

Harris English

“I grew up playing all sports and watching him do what he was doing made me want to be the greatest athlete of all time. He brought that course in 1997 to its knees. There have some guys that have done that to courses but they didn’t have the touch. They didn’t have the shot making skills, the wedge game, the iron game, the putting. He meant a lot to me and he’s meant everything to this game. He kind of brought in fitness; he really took it to the next level. He made guys work hard. I was like a lot of kids back then who grew up watching Tiger and we all wanted to be like him and he pushed the best players in the game to a level that’s never been seen before. Think about that. He did all that. That’s something.”

Brooks Koepka

“The only reason I’m playing golf is because Tiger made the game cool. Seeing him do what he did when I was growing up, how he dominated the game, how he made it cool for anyone to play, how cool he was, that made me want that. Growing up you want to be the best and you want to play the best and I do that now because of Tiger.”

Memorial Tournament
Tiger Woods and Brooks Koepka during the second round of The Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club. (Photo: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports)

Bubba Watson

“There are so many memories of Tiger but 1997 stands out and I remember that huge red sweater he was wearing. And the fist pumps. And all those shots he hit that no one else could hit. I was just about to graduate high school. And I’m thinking, I want to be there one day. I want to do what he’s doing. I want to be a professional, I want to be a guy that has a chance to play the Masters. That’s what Tiger did to me. That was the first time I really started working hard on my game.

“I learned by watching him. I never hit a cut until I turned so called pro and a lot was because of Tiger. I’d go out to the range and try to emulate what he was doing. As far as golf, there are only a handful of people in our history, and in all the sports, for that matter, who make people be glued to the TV, and Tiger was one of those guys. Because he did and does things that people can’t do. He inspired so many others. How many people can say they did that?”

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‘He’s a bulldog’: Players react to Zach Johnson being named United States Ryder Cup captain for 2023

Players react to their new captain for 2023.

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – Zach Johnson is the right choice.

That’s the overwhelming feeling among players and former captains concerning Johnson officially being named the 2023 Ryder Cup captain for Team USA on Monday at PGA of American headquarters in Palme Beach Gardens, Florida.

“He’s smart.”

“He’s confident.”

“He’s honest.”

“He’s a bulldog.”

“He’s just good people.”

That’s just a snapshot of the praise for Johnson, 46, who has played in the Ryder Cup five times and the Presidents Cup four times. He’s also been an assistant captain the past two editions of the Ryder Cup.

Now the mission for the two-time major champion and winner of 12 PGA Tour titles is to end the USA’s 30-year drought on foreign soil in the biennial matches against Europe at Marco Simone Golf & Country Club in Rome, Italy.

Here are those who think he’s up to the task.

Brooks Koepka healthy and all in for Team USA at the Ryder Cup

Koepka set the record straight on his commitment to the Ryder Cup team, which had been called into question recently.

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HAVEN, Wis. – Brooks Koepka said his commitment to Team USA and the Ryder Cup should not be called into question.

“I enjoy it. I think it’s a lot of fun to play,” Koepka said Thursday at Whistling Straits, home to the 43rd Ryder Cup. “I wouldn’t be nervous on that first tee if I didn’t care.”

A recent wide-ranging Q and A with Golf Digest, however, cast doubt in some circles. So much so that Paul Azinger, who bleeds red, white and blue and has played in four editions of the Ryder Cup in addition to captaining the U.S. to victory in 2008, suggested if Koepka doesn’t love the Ryder Cup, he should have relinquished his spot in the team.

But Koepka, who has played on the last two teams and is 4-3-1 in eight matches, never said he didn’t like the Ryder Cup in his interview with Golf Digest. He said the Ryder Cup is different, especially for someone who grew up playing an individual sport.

RYDER CUP: Live updates | How to watch

“I don’t want to say it’s a bad week,” the four-time major winner and world No. 10 told Golf Digest. “We’re just so individualized, and everybody has their routine and a different way of doing things, and now, it’s like, OK, we have to have a meeting at this time or go do this or go do that. It’s the opposite of what happens during a major week.

“It’s tough. There are times where I’m like, ‘I won my match. I did my job. What do you want from me?’ I know how to take responsibility for the shots I hit every week. Now, somebody else hit a bad shot and left me in a bad spot, and I know this hole is a loss. That’s new, and you have to change the way you think about things. You go from an individual sport all the time to a team sport one week a year. It’s so far from my normal routine.”

This led Azinger, who is the lead golf analyst this week, to say in a conference call that he wasn’t sure if Koepka loves the Ryder Cup.

“If he doesn’t love it, he should relinquish his spot and get people there who do love the Ryder Cup,” Azinger said. “Not everybody embraces it. But if you don’t love it and you’re not sold out, then I think Brooks – especially being hurt – should consider whether or not he really wants to be there.”

Ryder Cup Practice Round
Team USA captain Steve Stricker (left) talks to player Brooks Koepka (right) on the 16th hole during a practice round for the 43rd Ryder Cup golf competition at (Photo. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Azinger wasn’t alone in his take on the Koepka interview. But Koepka has worked hard to recover from a wrist injury that forced him to withdraw from the Tour Championship in the third round earlier this month. And he answered his critics in his meeting with the media on Thursday.

“I never said (the Ryder Cup) was negative. Y’all spun it that way,” Koepka said, referring to the media. “I never said it was negative. I said it was different. Like I said, I’ve never played any of these team events. I didn’t play Walker Cup. Never played Junior Ryder Cup. Never played anything. I just said it’s different.

“That doesn’t mean it’s bad. Y’all spun it that way.

“It takes a little bit of adjusting but once you get out there, it’s the same thing; it’s competition. It’s, go put the ball in the hole as quickly as possible, and hit the best shot you can. It takes a little bit of adjusting but it’s tough. I mean, my whole life, I just played an individual sport and go to a team, so it is different.

“But I enjoy it. I think it’s fun.”

When asked if he thought some of the expected 45,000 fans per day might think he doesn’t love the Ryder Cup, Koepka said he “can only do my job.”

“And then y’all report whatever your opinion or side might be,” he said. “So you guys have kind of already spun it negatively, so it kind of is going to trickle to the fans because you guys are kind of our only outlet besides social media. So it’s how you guys take it and spin it, and you guys spun it negatively. Whatever they think is kind of off what they read, whether you write an article, whatever you’re doing. They read that stuff. So it’s all kind of your guys’ opinion, they are going to take that side a little bit more.”

As for his injured wrist, Koepka said he’s all good.

“I’m like glass, so I wouldn’t say I am 100 percent,” he said. “I feel fine. I feel as good as I’ve felt in a long time. Over the past week and a half, I did a lot of work on it with Derek Samuel, my trainer. He was down with me for about eight days, so able to kind of work everything out and make sure it’s fine. But I feel good and I’m ready to go as much or as little as they want.”

Even if he’s asked to play 36 holes per day on Friday and Saturday?

“I’m good,” he said.

And there have been no dustups with Bryson DeChambeau. The two have quarreled on social media that past four months, which led some to wonder if there’d be problems in the team room this week. There haven’t been. In a video posted by the USA’s Ryder Cup social media account, the two had a brief conversation on the driving range and all seemed civil.

“We are on the same team together,” Koepka said when asked what his relationship was with DeChambeau. “We’ve had dinner almost every night as a team. I got here on Monday. Everyone who is on our team is interacting and everybody is participating in conversations and doing everything we need to do.”

Which is to win back the four-pound, 17-inch tall gold cup.

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The U.S. Ryder Cup team seems like a reality TV show — we breakdown the key characters and storylines

Can the U.S. team get to the starting line without self-destructing?

When last we visited “As the Ryder Cup Turns,” Bryson DeChambeau said he had wrecked his hands preparing for a long-drive contest that had nothing to do with the Ryder Cup, Brooks Koepka was saying the Ryder Cup was a tough week for a player like him, Paul Azinger was saying if Brooks doesn’t love it, he should leave it and Steve Stricker was in the corner trying to figure out two-man pairings where the two players might actually have civil conversations during the round.

When exactly did the U.S. Ryder Cup team become a reality television show, complete with petty feuds and seeming indifference to the event itself? What in the wide, wide world of Kardashian is going on here?

The question as Ryder Cup week begins next week is not if the United States team can beat the European team, but if the U.S. team can get to the starting line without self-destructing. It has always been considered that Europe approaches the Cup matches more like a cohesive team while the Americans approach the matches as 12 rugged individuals. That has never been more apparent than this year.

Here are some of the key characters and storylines as the big event approaches:

Lynch: Brooks Koepka says he’s healthy, ready for Ryder Cup battle

Steve Stricker won’ need a 13th man after all. Brooks Koepka says he is healthy and will play for the U.S. next week.

Steve Stricker won’t need a 13th man after all. Brooks Koepka says he is healthy and will play for the U.S. in next week’s Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits.

Koepka’s participation had been in doubt since he withdrew during the third round of the Tour Championship 11 days ago after injuring his hand while hitting a tree root while attempting a shot. But the world No. 9 confirmed to Golfweek Wednesday night that he will be in Wisconsin.

“I’ll be there. I’m good to go,” he said via text message. “I’m feeling good. Been doing my rehab, doing everything I need to do to be ready for the Cup. I’ll be there ready to play.”

Koepka initially feared he had aggravated a wrist injury from three years ago and that he briefly lost feeling in his left arm. “When I hit the root I thought it was a stinger and my wrist was feeling weird,” he said. “I lost feeling to my elbow for a bit. Feeling came back from my elbow to mid-forearm two minutes later, but from mid-forearm to hand was kinda numb.”

Koepka felt he had no option but to withdraw from the FedEx Cup finale at East Lake. “I couldn’t continue because I had no grip strength in my left hand,” he said.

One day after that withdrawal, Koepka said his arm still felt tight so he had an MRI scan that indicated no broken bones. “The MRI showed us some stuff and just making sure it’s calmed down and got everything worked out,” he said. “Grip pressure has gotten back to normal.”

“Some ice, some rest, some soft tissue work and some rehab and we’re good to go,” he said.

Koepka told Golfweek he started practicing in the last few days and that U.S. captain Stricker has been kept informed on his progress throughout.

“The captain and vice-captains have been informed every step of the way and know I’ll be ready to go,” he said.

The Ryder Cup begins September 24.

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Paul Azinger on Brooks Koepka: ‘I’m not sure he loves the Ryder Cup that much’

NBC’s Paul Azinger was reacting to a question about the Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka dynamic.

Ryder Cup week is almost here. The buzz is building. The subplots are percolating. And NBC’s Paul Azinger is wondering out loud if everyone on the U.S. side is all in.

During a conference call with reporters on Wednesday, Azinger, who captained the 2008 U.S. squad to victory over Nick Faldo’s European team, was asked about the Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka dynamic.

“If you were in the position of being the U.S. captain, what would you say to Brooks and Bryson and some of the guys who have had, I guess, prickly relationships in the last few months?” he was asked.

Azinger said first off that everyone would need to set their issues aside, then remarked how DeChambeau and Koepka could lead the way, by putting “the United States on their shoulders and carry this Ryder Cup team.”

But “they can also be a royal pain in the neck,” he added before commenting on a recent Golf Digest article in which Koepka talked about several things, including the Ryder Cup.

“Brooks, when I just read that article, I’m not sure he loves the Ryder Cup that much,” Azinger said. “If he doesn’t love it, he should relinquish his spot and get people there who do love the Ryder Cup. Not everybody embraces it, but if you don’t love it and you’re not sold out, then I think Brooks should — especially being hurt, should consider whether or not he really wants to be there.”

Koepka is recovering from a wrist injury. He withdrew during the third round of the Tour Championship 11 days ago, two holes after he hit a tree root at impact while attempting an approach shot. He was the lone member of the 12-man U.S. squad to miss the two-day practice session at Whistling Straits last Sunday and Monday.

“Brooks is one of the most candid, most honest guys there is, and if he’s blatantly honest with himself and doesn’t want to be there, he should come out and say it,” Azinger said. “I don’t know, I’m a fan of both players. I just feel like it’s going to be one or the other. They’re going to put the weight of the team on their shoulders, or they’re going to be a pain in the neck.”

Koepka explained his Ryder Cup experiences in a the Digest interview with Matthew Rudy.

“It’s different. It’s hectic. It’s a bit odd, if I’m honest,” he said. “I don’t want to say it’s a bad week. We’re just so individualized, and everybody has their routine and a different way of doing things, and now, it’s like, OK, we have to have a meeting at this time or go do this or go do that. It’s the opposite of what happens during a major week. If I break down a major week, it’s so chill. You wouldn’t even believe me.”

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‘Don’t count Tiger out’: Golf legends talk injuries and Tiger Woods’ mental toughness

From the inspirational story of Dennis Walters to Ben Hogan, golfers have shown the power of the human spirit to prevail.

Dennis Walters has a message for all the doubters who say Tiger Woods is finished after suffering multiple injuries to his legs and shattering his ankle in a single-vehicle collision on Tuesday in Los Angeles.

“I’m betting on Tiger,” said Walters, who was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2019. “He’s proven he can overcome almost anything.”

More than 45 years ago, on July 21, 1974, Walters, an aspiring professional golf, was driving a cart down a gravel path. He was riding a golf cart down a steep hill when the brakes failed and he was thrown from the cart, severing his spine. He couldn’t feel his legs when he woke up in a hospital bed and knew his dream of playing on the PGA Tour was over. He has been paralyzed from the waist down since that day.

“The one thing I have learned is not to really believe anything doctors predict,” Walters said. “Medicine is not an exact science. When you combine the human will and the human spirit to overcome things, that is a very powerful force and I believe if it is possible, Tiger can do it. I’d never count him out. His mental capacity far exceeds anyone I’ve ever seen. I think that’s his strongest weapon once he gets to the point that he is able to physically rehab. If he wants to do it, I’d say Tiger Woods will be OK.”

Tiger Woods car accident
A tow truck recovers the vehicle driven by Tiger Woods in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, on February 23, 2021, after a rollover accident. (Photo: Frederic J. Brown/ AFP via Getty Images)

Walters predicted that the healing process the next few months will be difficult physically, but the bar will be set even higher mentally. When Woods spoke on TV on Sunday, he was nearing the point where he thought his surgically-repaired back might allow him to begin preparing for a return in time to play the Masters in April. He must start over again. Walters knows the feeling. Six months after his accident, Walters wasn’t making any progress so he confronted his doctor.

“He said, ‘You’re never going to walk again.’ That made me cry,” Walters recalled. “I said, ‘How about playing golf? He said, ‘Forget it.’ I said two words to him and they weren’t happy birthday!”

Essex County Golf Club in West Orange, New Jersey, where Walters once had qualified for the U.S. Amateur, was across a road from his rehab center. Walters told his doctor that he was going to return some day and hit golf balls from the parking lot on to the course.

“I came back a year and a half later and did that. My doctor said, ‘I’m never telling anyone they can’t do anything,’ ” Walters said. “It’s folly to predict what a human being can do. That’s my reasoning for saying, let things progress and see what happens. I’m betting on Tiger Woods. To what degree? I don’t know, but if Tiger Woods is given a chance, he might be able to give us more thrills like he has all these years.”

Walters has toured the country performing more than 3,000 golf exhibitions, and was Woods’ opening act when he did junior clinics early in his career. It was a letter in the mail from golf great Ben Hogan, who had suffered his own life-threatening injuries after being hit by a bus head on in 1949 and recovering to win six majors, and his support that provided a psychological lift for Walters.

Count former PGA Championship winner and NBC golf commentator Paul Azinger among those who agree that Tiger isn’t done yet.

“You can’t forget that nobody fights back harder than Tiger,” Azinger said.

“I will never stop believing that he won’t make a Ben Hogan recovery until he doesn’t,” Woods’ former instructor Hank Haney tweeted.

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Woods has won a major on one leg, endured five back surgeries and come back time and time again, but this is different.

“This is his greatest challenge,” former U.S. Open champion and ESPN golf analyst Curtis Strange said. “This is something he can’t control. He’s got a beat-up body in that hospital and it’s going to take time to heal. Only then can he think about golf. But regardless, this isn’t the end of Tiger. He still has so much to offer the game.”

Comebacks have defined Woods’ career. This one may require him to re-learn how to walk and there’s no telling yet what the crash has done to his balky back. But Strange remains hopeful, too.

“Look at Alex Smith,” he said, referring to the Washington Football Team quarterback who recovered from a gruesome injury to his leg that was believed to be career-ending. “Did it seem possible he could play football last year? But he did. What seems impossible can happen.”

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If the wind blows at WGC-Workday Championship, Concession course could create concussions

If the wind blows at the WGC-Workday Championship, The Concession course could create concussions for players.

BRADENTON, Fla. – Three weeks ago, former Ryder Cup captain and major winner Paul Azinger turned into a 10-eyed monster.

The NBC analyst, who is an honorary member at The Concession, home to this week’s World Golf Championships-Workday Championship, was with producer Tommy Roy and co-producer Thomas Randolph as they surveyed the course to decide where to put cameras for the broadcast. Now, Azinger has played The Concession for more than a decade but on this occasion, he looked at the layout through the eyes of Dustin Johnson, Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy, and Bryson DeChambeau, a foursome of bashers who can overpower most any golf track.

“I saw what they are going to see and I turned into a 10-eyed creature and I saw a different golf course,” Azinger said. “I saw water that wasn’t in play where it was in play for everyone else. If you have great carry distance, you can make a mockery of it. If you don’t have great carry distance, it’s tough.

“You have to get past the first five holes if you want to post a good score, but with their length, it’s very possible.”

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Still, Azinger doesn’t think the course will be a pushover, especially if the wind blows.

“When the wind blows, it’s a two-man game out there,” Azinger said. “You better have a good caddie.”

That’s because of the many hazards and treacherous greens. The course, ranked No. 9 on Golfweek’s Best Private Courses list in Florida, was inspired by Jack Nicklaus’ concession of a three-foot putt to Tony Jacklin in the 1969 Ryder Cup, the gesture meaning the matches ended in a tie and the U.S. retained the Cup.

With Jacklin’s consultation Nicklaus designed the course, which can play out to 7,564 yards with a par of 72. Some said he made the greens too difficult, leading to a nickname for the course – The Concussion. The greens have softened over the years but remain challenging.

“They greens are broken into segments and they are severe. Some are tilted, some are very specifically shelved. There are specific areas that are small greens onto themselves,” Azinger said. “There are a lot of raised flats. It will be a tricky course. They will have to control their spins into the greens if they are soft. If the greens are firm and the wind is blowing at all, it’s a where-not-to-miss-it course.

“It’s not a super treacherous driving course, except for the water holes, and there are several of them, especially 5, 10, 13, 15 and 16. But I think the players will hit six sand wedges into greens every day.

“It’s going to be a great test, especially if the wind blows.”

WGC-Workday: Fantasy rankings | Odds | Prop bets

The players agree.

“It’s a good track. It’s all right in front of you,” world No. 3 Justin Thomas said. “I think there’s the opportunity to challenge some holes off the tee and you can play a little bit more aggressively. A lot of water, very typical Florida course in that aspect. It definitely seems like an amateur golfer’s nightmare. It’s very difficult and grainy around the greens and a lot of elevated greens.

“It’s a lot of holes that we’ve had a hard time finding four pin placements because the greens are so severe. The greens are very elevated, it’s very grainy, the grass is tight. You can hit it in a lot of spots around the greens where you’re just kind of chipping it back and forth and having a hard time.

“If the greens were firm, it would be challenging I think is an understatement, but I think it’s going to still be a good test considering how the course will evolve over the course of the week. They’re very tough. I mean, like I said, I think this is an amateur golfer’s nightmare.”

Defending champion Patrick Reed felt after his practice round that putting the greens was OK. Chipping on to them, well, that’s another story.

“The problem is when you miss the green,” Reed said. “It’s really grainy, it’s really tight and the banks are really steep where some of those chips that you think you can bump and run the ball just don’t bounce and they come back to your feet. At the same time, if I hit a foot too far, it goes over the green and down another hill.

“It’s definitely going to take some patience and creativity around the greens this week, but hopefully you’re able to hit the ball well enough where you’re not having to focus too much on having to chip around this place.”

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Paul Azinger: On-air ‘steroids’ remark about Bryson DeChambeau taken out of context

It was surely meant as a compliment to Bryson DeChambeau, who was putting the finishing touches on a six-shot rout at Winged Foot.

“Validation on steroids.”

NBC analyst Paul Azinger uttered those words on Sunday during the final round of the U.S. Open.

It was surely meant as a compliment to Bryson DeChambeau, who was coming up the 18th fairway at the time, looking to put the finishing touches on a six-shot rout in the 120th rendition of the national championship.

DeChambeau has been dogged by the steroid accusations. Putting on all that bulk and bragging about all those protein shakes will do it, it seems. But the insinuations are unfair nonetheless.

Azinger explained to Golfweek by text message that his words were taken out of context.

“If anyone was thinking I was implying that Bryson was on steroids they completely misinterpreted that,” he said. “They get tested twice a week for crying out loud. Bad choice of words. He took a lot of (bleep) and validated everything he’s done. If that needs cleaning up then the world has gone to hell.”

Still, it certainly made everyone’s ears perk up during the NBC telecast.

Steve DiMeglio contributed reporting.

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The 5 best PGA Championships of the last 30 years

So much drama, so many memories, but not quite on the level as these five all-time favorites. Here are the top 5 PGAs of the last 30 years.

The Wanamaker Trophy has been awarded 101 times, and while Brooks Koepka will have to wait a little longer to attempt to three-peat due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, it won’t stop us from reliving some of the great moments in PGA Championship history in what should have been this week for the 102nd PGA at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco.

For this exercise, we’ve centered on the top 5 PGA’s of the last 30 years, which meant leaving out some great duels such as David Toms over Phil Mickelson in 2001, the underdog story of Rich Beem over Tiger Woods, or how about unheralded Shaun Micheel stiffing it at the 72nd hole in 2003.

So much drama, so many memories, but not quite on the level as these five all-time favorites.