Tiger Woods recently spoke about his future in golf and the hardships that he had to endure following the car crash he was in this past February. If this is the end of Woods competing at a championship level, it is truly the end of an era.
āIām lucky to be alive and also have a limb,ā Woods said in a news conference held in the Bahamas.
The tragic accident happened to Woods in Southern California and he didnāt answer any specific questions pertaining to the crash. He was in the hospital for three weeks and suffered significant injuries to his right leg and was in danger of having it amputated.
āThis oneās been much more difficult,ā he said about the multiple returns from injury he has endured in his career. āThe knee stuff was one thing, thatās one level. Then the back. With this right leg ⦠itās hard to explain how difficult it is. Being immobile for three months, just to lay there. I was just looking forward to getting outside. That was a goal of mine. Especially for a person who lived his entire life outside, that was a goal.
āI transitioned from a wheelchair to crutches and now nothing. Itās been a lot of hard work.ā
Woods was like the Michael Jordan of golf. During his prime, he was one of the biggest attractions in sports and like Jordan, he seemed unbeatable once he reached his peak greatness. It was hard hearing him talk about possibly not getting anywhere close to that level of greatness ever again.
āAs far as playing at the tour level, I donāt know when thatās going to happen,ā he said. āNow Iāll play a round here or there, a little hit and giggle, I can do something like that. The USGA suggested Play It Forward [the tees]. I really like that idea now. I donāt like the tees on the back. I like Play It Forward. Come on, letās move it up, letās move it up.
āTo 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 Iām able to do it again. Thatās something that for a while there it didnāt look like I was going to.ā
When he was in his prime, I was one of the people that was 100% sure that Woods was going to break Jack Nicklausā record of 18 major championships. I didnāt factor in the injuries and the personal trauma that Woods has been through over the last decade.
If this is the end of competitive golf for Woods, he will go down as the best golfer in the history of the game for most people. He has 82 tour victories and 15 major championships with his last coming at the 2019 Masters Tournament. His last major may have been his greatest win of them all, because it was the most unexpected.
āI got that last major, and I ticked off two more events along the way,ā he said. āI donāt foresee this leg ever being what it used to be, hence Iāll never have it back to what it used to be and the clockās ticking. Iām getting older, Iām not getting any younger. All that combined means a full schedule and a full practice schedule and the recovery that would take to do that ⦠no, I donāt have any desire to do that.
āBut to ramp it up for a few events a year and, as I alluded to what Mr. [Ben] Hogan did, and he did a pretty good job of it, and thereās no reason that I canāt do that and feel ready. I may not be tournament-sharp in a sense that I havenāt played tournaments, but I think if you practice correctly and you do it correctly, that Iāve come off surgeries before. So I know the recipe for it, Iāve just got to get to a point where I feel comfortable enough where I can do that again.ā
Woods was the reason a lot of Black men and women became interested in the sport of golf. Whether it was watching his tournaments on television, or actually playing a round, Black people around the globe rallied to support Woods as he continued to climb the ladder of the sport.
I remember being a young teenage kid watching him play tournaments and thinking to myself that it was great to see someone who looked like me playing a sport that was majority white. Watching him rise to the top of the sport led me to ask my parents for golf lessons, because the game seemed fun and it was.
Iām sure that I was just one of the millions of kids who were inspired by Woods. Itās unfortunate that we have not seen another Black man or woman rise through the ranks of the sport and compete as one of the best in the sport. After 25 years, I figured that we would have had one by now.
Around the same time Woods was becoming dominant, the Williamsā sisters were coming up in the world of womenās tennis. Together they dominated womenās tennis for nearly two decades and we have seen the effects of that with the emergence of players like Sloane Stephens, Coco Gauff, Madison Keys and Naomi Osaka.
The same has not happened in the world of golf, but who knows, the next Tiger Woods could be on his way up the rankings as we speak. In any case, not seeing Woods at his peak is like watching Jordan with the Wizards, or Ali against Larry Holmes, or Deion Sanders as a Washington Redskin.
Woodsā greatness will never be forgotten, but one has to wonder how many majors he would have won had it not been for those injuries he suffered during his 30s. He has not said when a return to the tour would happen, or if it would happen at all, but he said conversations with his family about a limited return have taken place.
āAm I going to put my family through it again, am I going to put myself out there again? We had a talk within the family, all of us sat down and said, if this leg cooperates and I get to a point where I can play the tour, is it OK with you guys if I try and do it?ā Woods said. āThe consensus was yes.
āNow internally, I havenāt reached that point. I havenāt proven it to myself that I can do it. I can show up here and I can host an event. I can play a par-3 course. I can hit a few shots. I can chip and putt. But weāre talking about going out there and playing against the worldās best on the most difficult golf courses under the most difficult conditions. Iām so far from that.
āI have a long way to go to get to that point. I havenāt decided whether or not I want to get to that point. Iāve got to get my leg to a point where that decision can be made. And weāll see what happens when I get to that point, but Iāve got a long way to go with this leg.ā