A year removed from Tiger Woods’ crash, new Fox Nation special showcases similarities to Ben Hogan’s accident

Will Cain steers the story with special contributions from Rocco Mediate, the USGA’s Mike Trostel and more.

A year ago golf fans were quick to try and compare Tiger Woods’ car crash and Ben Hogan’s accident when the 15-time major champion was involved in a single-car accident that nearly cost him his leg.

As the year went on, more similarities emerged between the two accidents. With the unfortunate anniversary right around the corner, Fox Nation has showcased the comparisons between Woods and Hogan with its new special, Long Drive Back: Tiger Woods and Ben Hogan.

Fox & Friends Weekend co-host and former ESPN host Will Cain steers the story with special contributions from Rocco Mediate, the USGA’s Mike Trostel and Fox News Channel’s Bill Hemmer.

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“My concern with Tiger’s injury first was can he be like, hanging out with his kids anymore? Is he going to be able to walk? Golf was like, who cares?” said Mediate, the six-time PGA Tour winner who famously lost to Woods in a playoff at the 2008 U.S. Open. “Has he not given us enough? Right? Has he not given us enough? And everyone was like, ‘When’s he gonna come back and play again?’ In the meantime, he was almost dead. They’re worried about when he’s gonna play again.”

“It is eerie how similar these two stories are,” added Hemmer.

The special can be streamed now on Fox Nation. Not sold yet? Here’s a preview.

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Arduous year ends on high note as Tiger Woods celebrates 46th birthday

As Tiger celebrates his 46th birthday, there is plenty to celebrate as he eyes the candles on the cake.

Tiger Woods knows he’s lucky to be alive.

Fortunate to still have use of both of his legs.

Blessed to once more be hitting golf balls with authority.

And elated to be able to play with his two children again.

“I’m very grateful that someone upstairs was taking care of me, that I’m able to not only be here but also to walk without a prosthesis,” Woods said in the Bahamas the first week of December, alluding to the February single-car accident on a quiet street north of Los Angeles where he sailed across a median at excessively high speed and rolled over multiple times down an embankment.

The jaws of life were used to extract Woods from the vehicle that day. His right leg was shattered and talk of amputation was later discussed; multiple surgeries ensued, however, and no such measure was taken. The jarring images of the wreckage left many to believe the Big Cat had called on one of his nine lives.

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After three months of being bed ridden and battling pain each day, Woods was able to move about, work hard every day doing physical exercises and start recovering from the latest trauma to his battered body.

It was a torturous year, one that began with rehabilitation and recovery from a fifth back surgery the last week of 2020, some two months before his Feb. 23 accident. At the Hero World Challenge he hosted in the Bahamas, Woods said he would like to turn the page on 2021. Who can blame him?

But as he celebrates his 46th revolution around the sun on the 30th of December, there is plenty to celebrate as he eyes the candles on the cake. In the word of Woods, his traj has been on an improving track, the 11th and 12th months of 2021 on the better side of par than the previous 10 months.

First there was a three-second video in November of one swing with a wedge accompanied by two words – Making Progress. Then a 23-second video featuring his action with a 3-wood in the Bahamas. Followed by repeated range sessions later at the Hero World Challenge, with driver in his hands.

And to wrap up the year, a triumphant return to golf alongside his son, Charlie, in the PNC Championship, where the two set a tournament record with 11 consecutive birdies on Sunday and fell two shots shy and finished second.

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He blasted drives of 300-plus yards that weekend, struck long irons with force and accuracy, wedged well and putted and chipped with excellence. He was all smiles and having a blast. He was a shocking figure of health, all things considered, less than 10 months after he faced possible death.

“I think he’s got alien DNA,” is how Notah Begay, his longtime friend and current golf analyst, put it.

Begay isn’t the first in golf circles to wonder if Woods is human, considering his out-of-this-world resume and his supernatural might to rise from another proverbial burial of his golf career. He did, after all, return to the top of the mountain after a Hail Mary spinal fusion surgery less than four years ago to win his 15th major championship and record-tying 82nd PGA Tour title.

Amid the din of critics writing him off throughout his career, Woods has authored numerous, successful comebacks. And now, there is again light to chase in his future if he decides to return to the PGA Tour.

“I’ve said many times, don’t doubt him,” Justin Thomas said at the Hero. “If he can come back, if he decides to come back, he will.”

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While the golf world has gone mad with predictions of when Woods will play again on the PGA Tour – Torrey, Riviera, Augusta National, the Old Course? – he has tempered the optimism by saying he’s not in golf shape, not in practice shape, not in PGA Tour tournament shape. He can’t walk an 18-hole course yet, either.

“I still have a long way to go in this rehab process,” he said at the PNC.

But he will be eyeing more progress in 2022, which he can celebrate as the smoke from the 46 candles dissipates in the air. He can look forward to being inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame during Players Championship week in March. The continued influence of his foundation. The further growth of his children.

More rounds with Charlie.

And Woods, along with a sporting world thirsting for a return, can cling to the words written by Andy Dufresne to Ellis Boyd “Red” Redding.

“Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.”

Woods has hope again.

As do fans.

“The competitive juices, they are never going to go away,” he said at the PNC. “This is my environment. This is what I’ve done my entire life. I’m just so thankful to be able to have this opportunity to do it again. Earlier this year was not a very good start to the year, and it didn’t look very good.”

It’s looking a whole lot better. Happy birthday.

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When it comes to Tiger Woods’ return to the PGA Tour, let’s just slow down, folks

Sports fans tend to be an incredibly impatient group.

Sports fans tend to be an incredibly impatient group.

If your team won a title two years ago, why didn’t they win one last year? If your team settled for a field goal, the fans insist they should have gone for the touchdown. Rookies have to start in week one of their professional careers or they are busts. Why build for the future when you can win now, now, now?

So it has been with the latest in a series of comebacks for Tiger Woods, the king of the comeback in golf. After a horrific automobile crash that could have taken his life last February, Woods has once again fought his way back from physical adversity to tee off in a PGA Tour event. OK, it’s an unofficial event, a Silly Season tournament where who wins and who loses doesn’t mean much at all. But the PNC Championship this weekend is a chance to see Woods hitting golf balls, and that alone is thrilling considering it was possible that might never happen again.

But that won’t stop people from wanting Woods to win a major championship this year. They will want him to play a relatively full schedule. Get that one win to pass Sam Snead on the all-time wins list, some fans will cry. Get closer to Jack Nicklaus on the all-time major titles ladder, some will demand.

Let’s slow down, folks.

PNCTiger Woods, Charlie gallery | PNC photo gallery | How to watch

Yes, Tiger Woods is playing golf this week with his son and other professionals and their family members. He’s even playing well. But don’t mistake this for Woods playing PGA Tour-caliber golf. Woods is tantalizing fans with his game, but look closer and you know this is not a guy getting ready to play in the Farmers Insurance Open in February.

Can he even walk 18 holes? Remember, this is not a disability that Woods has, like Casey Martin had when he used a cart on the Tour. This is classified as an injury. So Woods can use a cart in the unofficial event this week but will walk when he comes back to the Tour. Not just 18 holes, mind you, but 72 holes on golf courses with hills and swales and bumps that will create strange sidehill and downhill lies. When will Woods be able to handle all of that?

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Too many questions to answer

And how have the injuries to his leg impacted his golf swing? Is the leg strong enough to take the stress and torque that Woods has always created in his swing? Maybe that will come down the road, but it certainly isn’t there now in terms of playing four days in a PGA Tour event.

In other words, there are still too many unknowns to make Woods the betting favorite at the Masters. Maybe Las Vegas should be taking bets on whether Woods even plays in the Masters. You might want to bet against that.

No one on the PGA Tour today knows more about what it takes to come back from physical ailments than Woods. From the knee surgeries to the back surgeries that seemed to end his career at one point, Woods has followed a strict path of rehabilitation and hard work to not only play again but win again. Maybe there is another comeback in Woods. Maybe there isn’t.

Woods will be back in some way, shape or form. That will be terrific for golf, since he is the best golfer of a couple of generations now and many will steadfastly argue that he is the greatest golfer of all time. It is wonderful to see him on a golf course again, smiling, laughing and admiring the swing of his 12-year-old son Charlie in the PNC Championship.

But patience is a virtue for Woods now as he battles back from the accident. Hopefully, golf fans will find the patience to let Woods return to competition in his own time.

Larry Bohannan is The Desert Sun golf writer, he can be reached at larry.bohannan@desertsun.com or (760) 778-4633. Follow him on Facebook or on Twitter at @larry_Bohannan.

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Tiger Woods grateful, surprisingly upbeat as he faces an unknown future

As a painful year nears its close, a surprisingly upbeat Tiger Woods is facing down his future head-on.

NASSAU, Bahamas – Relentless Father Time is a foe.

As is his damaged right leg and foot.

And the troublesome back remains a constant battle.

But as a painful year nears its close, a surprisingly upbeat Tiger Woods is facing down his future in a different manner.

He’s been down this road before following scandal and surgeries, one of the most harrowing being his return from spinal fusion surgery a few years back. This time, however, following his horrific one-car, rollover accident last February that nearly cost him his right leg, let alone his life, the 15-time major champion is OK with the prospect of never playing again at the game’s highest level.

But he’ll give it a go.

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“I don’t foresee this leg ever being what it used to be, I’ll never have the back what it used to be, and the clock’s ticking,” Woods said Tuesday at Albany ahead of Thursday’s start of the Hero World Challenge that he hosts and has attracted 20 of golf’s best players.

“I’m getting older, I’m not getting any younger,” he continued. “All that combined means that a full schedule and a full practice schedule and the recovery that it would take to do that, no, I don’t have any desire to do that.”

Still, there is an avenue Woods said he could choose to go down to try to return to the PGA Tour. He said he could pick and choose a few tournaments, like Ben Hogan did at the end of his career after he survived a brutal head-on car crash.

“He did a pretty good job of it, and there’s no reason that I can’t do that and feel ready,” Woods said. “I may not be tournament sharp in the sense I haven’t played tournaments, but I think if you practice correctly and you do it correctly, that I’ve come off surgeries before, I’ve come off long layoffs and I’ve won or come close to winning before. So I know the recipe for it. I’ve just got to get to a point where I feel comfortable enough where I can do that again.”

He’s been moving in the right direction for some time now, setting little milestones to conquer. First leaving a hospital bed after three months and getting outside to feel the warmth of the sun, then leaving behind the wheelchair he needed to get around, then tossing aside the crutches.

Earlier this month, he posted a three-second video of himself hitting a wedge. He has now progressed to playing a few holes.

On Tuesday, Woods walked into the media center at Albany without aid, slowly but without a limp. He smiled throughout his 40-minute presser. His upper body has certainly expanded, especially his Popeye arms.

While he remains in pain, he is at peace with his current state and the rehab road he eyes, especially knowing that he is lucky to be alive and fortunate to still have his right leg and foot, for amputation was on the table.

And his way of life is back, and his two children are at the ready to fill his heart.

“I’m very grateful that someone upstairs was taking care of me, that I’m able to not only be here but also to walk without a prosthesis,” he said. “Some dark moments, but then again, as I was making progress through it, I could see some light and that was giving me hope. I’m able to participate more with my kids and their activities and more just life in general. I’m on the positive side. I’m on the better side of it.

“But I’ve still got a long way to go.”

As far as a target date for a possible return – say the PNC Championship in mid-December – Woods isn’t eyeing the calendar.

“I’ll put it to you this way: as far as playing at the Tour level, I don’t know when that’s going to happen,” he said. “Now, I’ll play a round here or there, a little hit and giggle, I can do something like that. The USGA suggested Play It Forward. I really like that idea now.

“To see some of my shots fall out of the sky a lot shorter than they used to is a little eye‑opening, but at least I’m able to do it again. That’s something that for a while there it didn’t look like I was going to. Now I’m able to participate in the sport of golf. Now to what level, I do not know that.”

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In 2015 at the Hero World Challenge, a somber Woods felt his career could be over, saying, “Where is the light at the end of the tunnel? I don’t know. I think pretty much everything beyond this will be gravy.”

Well, that gravy included victory in the 2018 Tour Championship, his fifth green jacket coming in the 2019 Masters, and his record-tying 82nd PGA Tour title later that year in the Zozo Championship. Those moments provide him inspiration, just as teeing it up with Charlie or playing soccer with daughter, Sam. He is thinking about carrots at the end of a long tunnel and he’s ready to go after them.

“I have a long way in the rehab process of this leg and it’s not the fun stuff of the rehab,” he said. “It’s just reps and breaking up scar tissue and things that really hurt. So that part of it’s not going to be fun, but the challenge of it is.

“I enjoy the challenge of getting in there and trying to push it to the next level, sometimes it’s two steps forward, one step back, but you’ve got to go through it. I enjoy that part of it and maybe one day it will be good enough where I can get out here and I can compete against these best players in the world again.”

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‘(Amputation) was on the table’: Tiger Woods didn’t shy away from how serious his leg injury really was

“I’m lucky to be alive and to still have the limb.”

Tiger Woods addressed the media for the first time on Tuesday, a few days before the first round of his Hero World Challenge gets underway later this week.

After his car accident in February, the severity of Woods’ injuries couldn’t be understated. Seemingly everything in his lower left leg was shattered, and many questioned if he’d ever walk again.

“I’m lucky to be alive and to still have the limb. I’m very grateful that someone upstairs was taking care of me … (amputation) was on the table.”

The conversation is no longer about if he’ll ever walk again, but if he’ll ever play again. He touched on that possibility, and if he’ll ever be in a field on the PGA Tour down the road.

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“As far as playing at the Tour level, I don’t know when that’s gonna happen. I’ll play a round here and there, a little hit-and-giggle, I can do something like that.”

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Tiger Woods: Timeline of events a year after we last saw him (officially) at the November Masters

Tiger’s outlook is a lot different a year later.

Golf fans saw the worst and the best of Tiger Woods the last time the 15-time major champion teed it up in an official professional tournament (not counting the PNC Championship with his son, Charlie).

Monday marks 365 days since his final round at the November 2020 Masters.

Woods, a five-timer winner at Augusta National Golf Club, entered the final round 11 shots behind eventual champion Dustin Johnson and proceeded to do the unthinkable on multiple occasions.

First up was his eye-scratching 10 on the par-3 12th after rinsing three balls in Rae’s Creek, followed by his hot run down the stretch. Woods went on to birdie five of his last six holes, including his final four. Unlike the roars that greeted him on No. 18 after his win in 2019, Woods finished 4-over 76 to finish the tournament, and the year, in silence.

A lot has happened over the last year both on and off the golf course for Woods, and his future sure looks a lot different today than it did on that roller coaster Sunday.

Tiger Woods sighting? Photo indicates Tiger is back on the golf course watching over son Charlie, club in hand

Is the GOAT closer to a return than we all think?

Tiger Woods has been in recovery since his single-car accident back in February. Woods suffered fractures to his tibia and fibula in his right leg, along with other damage to the lower leg. He’s been spotted out and about in L.A. visiting doctors during his rehab, sitting in a cart watching his son, Charlie, play golf, but this sighting is a little bit different.

A photo posted to the Twitter account @TWLEGION appears to show Woods keeping an eye on his son on the range, reportedly at a junior event in Florida. Woods is standing on his own – no crutches or golf cart – with a golf club in hand, with just a black sleeve on the majority of his right leg.

We haven’t heard much from Woods since his accident, but we did hear about his conversation with the U.S. Ryder Cup team a few weeks ago at Whistling Straits. His message obviously resonated with the team, as they would go on to demolish the European side, 19-9.

This image should serve as another positive sign for golf fans, as it appears we may see Woods return to the PGA Tour after all. Steve Stricker had this to say about Woods in the days leading up to the Ryder Cup.

“He won’t be able to be a captain’s assistant this time around because of his on-going rehabilitation to try and get better. To try to play golf again. And that is going well,” Stricker said. “He’s progressing. He’s doing well, things are moving in the right direction.”

We’ve seen incredible things from Woods, including his triumph at Augusta National back in 2019. At this point, it’s impossible to doubt him.

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Tiger Woods spotted in Los Angeles on crutches as fans remember his 2008 U.S. Open win at Torrey Pines

Tiger Woods seems to be managing well on crutches as he arrives in Los Angeles. Meanwhile, U.S. Open week churns on in San Diego.

Three days into U.S. Open week at Torrey Pines in San Diego, the references to Tiger Woods’ win there in 2008 on a broken leg seem never-ending. (Is there a better U.S. Open hero story from recent memory? For a reminder,  check out the new plaque commemorating that victory at Torrey Pines.)

Woods obviously is not in this week’s field to make the same kind of magic as he continues his recovery from a single-car accident in February, but on Tuesday video surfaced on social media of Woods walking on crutches.

The video, posted by TMZ (and picked up on Instagram by the handle @twspot), shows Woods walking a short distance from an unidentified building to a waiting car. He is seen putting some weight on the injured right leg and maneuvering quite well.

The caption indicated that the video captured Woods’ arrival in Los Angeles.

For now, the wait continues for Big Cat to make a hopeful return to the competition stage, but you can count on a few hundred more Woods references before U.S. Open week is over.

Tiger Woods reveals first photo since accident, is standing on crutches with dog Bugs

For the first time since the accident that nearly took his life, Tiger Woods unveiled a picture on Friday, showing him standing on crutches next to his dog.

For the first time since the accident that nearly took his life, Tiger Woods unveiled a picture on Friday, showing him standing on crutches next to his dog.

Woods has stayed out of the limelight since the incident in February, when he injured in a crash in Rancho Palos Verdes on Hawthorne Boulevard. In March he returned from the Los Angeles hospital where he was recovering to his Florida home.

The fractures from the crash were on the upper and lower parts of both the fibula and tibia, and a rod was inserted to stabilize the area. Screws and pins were used to treat other injuries in the ankle and foot, while doctors sliced muscle in the area to relieve pressure and swelling in the area (a safeguard against infection).

But the 82-time PGA Tour champ looked in good spirits as he stood next to his dog Bugs, who is a Border Collie and Springer Spaniel Mix.

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Woods mistakenly thought he was in the state of Florida when he was interviewed by a sheriff’s deputy at a Los Angeles area hospital after he crashed his vehicle in February, according to a 22-page collision report that reveals several new details about the collision sequence and aftermath.

The sheriff’s department did not try to examine Woods’ blood for evidence of medication because there wasn’t a strong enough reason for it, according to deputies.

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Tiger Woods thought he was in Florida after car crash, report says

Tiger Woods thought he was in the state of Florida when interviewed by a sheriff’s deputy at a Los Angeles area hospital after he crashed.

Tiger Woods mistakenly thought he was in the state of Florida when he was interviewed by a sheriff’s deputy at a Los Angeles area hospital after he crashed his vehicle in February, according to a 22-page collision report that reveals several new details about the collision sequence and aftermath.

Among the revelations in the report:

The legendary golfer’s blood pressure also was “too low to administer any type of pain medication” shortly after the crash.

An empty pharmaceutical bottle was found in a backpack at the scene of the crash with no label or indication of what was inside it.

According to data from the vehicle’s black-box recorder, Woods also was going in a straight line with no steering input detected until some slight steering movement registered late in the recorded crash sequence.

“Had (Woods) applied his brakes to reduce his speed or steered to correct the direction of travel, he would not have collided with the center median and the collision would not have occurred,” said the report on the data prepared by Sergeant Michael Downing.

The 22-page report was obtained by USA TODAY Sports after the sheriff’s department announced Wednesday that the cause of the Woods crash was “driving at a speed unsafe for the road conditions and the inability to negotiate the curve of the roadway.”

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The conclusion to the data report raises the question of whether Woods tried to negotiate the curve at all as he was traveling at more than 82 mph in a 45-mph zone.

Instead of staying with his lane as it curved right, Woods went straight into the median shortly after 7 a.m. local time on Feb. 23. He struck a curb, mowed down a wooden sign and drove into opposing lanes before hitting a tree and rolling over in Rolling Hills Estates south of downtown Los Angeles. He suffered broken bones in his right leg that could jeopardize his golf career.

After hitting the median, he traveled a distance of several hundred feet with no evidence of braking. Woods instead suddenly applied the gas pedal at 99% in the final seconds before hitting the raised median that separates the north and south lanes of the road, according the report. Woods also told investigators he does not remember driving.

Jonathan Cherney, a former police detective in Southern California, reviewed the crash scene Feb. 24 and said it was “like a classic case of falling asleep behind the wheel, because the road curves and his vehicle goes straight.”

The collision report boosts that notion, said Cherney, who was not involved in the sheriff’s investigation but now works as a forensic crash reconstruction expert.

“The data here supports that he was not conscious,” Cherney said Wednesday. “I’m seeing the brakes off the entire time. I don’t see any steering at all (until late in the recorded crash sequence). That’s not indicative of emergency steering at all. This is not consistent with somebody who’s awake behind the wheel.”

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A report by another officer, Justin Smith, said “there was no reason to believe (Woods) had been operating a motor vehicle while impaired by alcohol/drugs.” Smith based this on interviews with other officers and video footage, but did not evaluate Woods himself on the day of the crash. Smith interviewed a paramedic who described Woods’ pupils as “slightly sluggish,” but the paramedic attributed the sluggish pupils to the trauma Woods had sustained from the collision.

A sheriff’s captain said Woods’ low blood pressure “was consistent with shock as a result of collision and the injuries (Woods) sustained.” The same captain said Woods was “somewhat combative” when they were trying to treat him on the scene of the crash. This also was determined to be consistent with the trauma Woods sustained.

Deputy Kyle Sullivan reported he interviewed Woods at the hospital after the crash that day while an injury to Woods’ face was being stitched.

“I then asked (Woods) if he is able to tell me about what happened regarding the traffic collision,” Sullivan wrote. Woods “told me he did not remember being involved in a traffic collision. (Woods) thought he was currently in the state of Florida.”

Sheriff Alex Villanueva said Woods would not be issued a citation because there were no independent witnesses and no peace officers who observed the collision sequence.

This is Woods’ third driving incident since 2009, when he was cited for careless driving after crashing into a fire hydrant and tree outside his home in Florida. A witness then said Woods was unconscious at the scene, according to a police report.

In 2017, police found Woods asleep at the wheel in Florida and arrested him for drunk driving. A toxicology report later revealed he had several medications in his system then, including the sleep medication Ambien, the painkiller Vicodin and THC. He checked into a clinic that year to get help with medications dealing with pain and sleep. He pleaded guilty to reckless driving.

After this latest crash, the sheriff’s department did not try to examine Woods’ blood for evidence of medication because there wasn’t a strong enough reason for it, according to Villanueva and one of his deputies.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. E-mail: bschrotenb@usatoday.com.