‘I’ve gotten a lot stronger’: Tiger Woods in better place physically as he preps for 104th PGA Championship

About 12 players got in some work at Southern Hills on Sunday. Tiger Woods was one of them.

TULSA, Okla. – A little more than a baker’s dozen of players braved the heat index that toppled 90 degrees to get in some prep work Sunday at Southern Hills Country Club ahead of the 104th playing of the PGA Championship.

Among them was a healthier Tiger Woods.

“I’ve gotten a lot stronger since the Masters,” Woods said as he toured the front nine of the locale where he won the 2007 PGA Championship, his 13th of 15 majors and his first as a father. “We went back to work on Tuesday (after the Masters). Monday was awful; I did nothing and Tuesday was leg day.

“So we went right back after it. Everything is better.”

Despite a vicious storm front moving into the area, Woods didn’t rush his practice round and spoke briefly on the fifth fairway with a dozen reporters. Joined by Gary Woodland on the fifth tee, and after signing golf flags for Kevin Na walking off the first tee, Woods spent considerable time on and around the greens.

And he was walking taller, swinging freer and looking stronger than just a month ago, when Woods returned at the Masters just 14 months after nearly killing himself in a single-car crash north of Los Angeles; it was later learned that amputation of Woods’ right leg was an option.

The five-time Masters champion opened with a 71 at Augusta National but faded to 47th with rounds of 74-78-78.

“Hundred percent I see him stronger. I just think the endurance is there now,” caddie Joe LaCava said. “I don’t think he’s getting quite as tired as quickly. I see more endurance more than anything.”

Woods flew to Tulsa for an 18-hole practice round in late April. Then LaCava spent three days with Woods in Florida earlier this week as his boss was “ramping it up,” said Woods.

“We were doing some practicing and some playing, so it was a combination,” LaCava said. “We were not just playing and not just practicing. We were kind of mixing it up, kind of simulating what you might do at a tournament, doing some chipping and putting before and after, so you’re on your feet a little bit longer.

“Other than the fact that he won here in 2007, I think it’s the stamina and endurance thing that excites him the most.”

As does the future.

“It’s only going to keep getting stronger,” Woods said of his right leg. “The more I use it, the more strength it gains. Am I ever going to have full mobility? No. Never again. But I’ll be able to get stronger. It’s going to ache, but that’s the way it’s going to be.

“I’m excited about (the week). I’m not going to play that much going forward so anytime I do play, it’s going to be fun to play and to compete. There only so many money games you can play at home.”

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UFC 259 video: Champ-champ Amanda Nunes, challenger Megan Anderson on weight

The seventh women’s featherweight title fight in UFC history is official after Amanda Nunes and Megan Anderson made weight for UFC 259.

LAS VEGAS – The seventh women’s featherweight title fight in UFC history is official after [autotag]Amanda Nunes[/autotag] and [autotag]Megan Anderson[/autotag] made weight for UFC 259.

At Friday’s official UFC 259 weigh-ins, reigning two-division champion Nunes (20-4 MMA, 13-1 UFC) and challenger Anderson (11-4 MMA, 3-2 UFC) had no issues on the scale as they successfully hit their marks for their co-headlining matchup.

Nunes, who is also the women’s bantamweight champion but looks to defend her featherweight title for a second time, registered at 145 pounds when she stepped on the scale. Anderson, a former Invicta FC champion, was just under at 144.5 pounds.

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UFC 259 takes place Saturday at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. The main card streams on ESPN+ pay-per-view (10 p.m. ET) following prelims on ESPN and ESPN+.

Watch the above video to see Nunes and Anderson make weight ahead of their co-main event clash at UFC 259.

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