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Beyond the trophies -- that includes eight money titles -- are the anecdotes. Like the time he hit a 6-iron out of a bunker, over the water and right at the flag with the tournament on the line in Canada. Or when his famous chip at the 2005 Masters ran up the green, made a U-turn, then hung on the edge of the cup for two full seconds and dropped for birdie.
Clutch moments?
Another long list, although the most memorable was his 15-foot birdie putt on the final hole of the 2008 U.S. Open to force a playoff, which he won the next day. Two days later, Woods revealed he had shredded ligaments in his left knee and a double stress fracture in his left tibia. He had season-ending surgery the following week.
With each moment, the legend grew.
Few other athletes have meant more to their sports. Television ratings spiked when Woods played, and often doubled when he won. Total prize money on the PGA Tour was $65 million when Woods turned pro in 1996. This year, prize money was at $275 million.
"That's one guy's fault," Ogilvy said. "That hasn't happened in tennis, has it? If you can't separate sports, if you can't compare them, you have to look at other ways he has changed the game.
"Look at this," Ogilvy said, pointing to some 5,000 fans trailing after Woods in a tournament played recently in China. "That wouldn't have happened without him."
Finchem pointed beyond prize money to the galleries Woods attracted on the PGA Tour, which helped the tour go over $1 billion in charity (almost all tournaments are nonprofit events), and to how he helped make golf part of the conversation among mainstream sports.
"Pick any metric applied to all sports, and his contribution has lifted the game," Finchem said.
Woods has been No. 1 in the world ranking for all but 32 weeks during the decade. Not since Tom Watson in 1980 had any player won six PGA Tour events in one season. Woods did it five times this decade, including nine victories in 2000, a year that became the benchmark of his success.
Over the '00s, Woods didn't have one rival. He recycled them.
Ernie Els might have said it best at the start of the decade, when he went toe-to-toe with Woods over the final 38 holes in Hawaii. Woods matched his eagle on the final hole to force a playoff, matched his birdie on the first extra hole, then won with a 35-foot birdie.
"I think he's a legend in the making," Els said that day. "You guys have helped, but he's backed it up with his golf game. He's 24. He's probably going to be bigger than Elvis when he gets into his 40s."
For a long time, that statement had the ring of truth. Now, who knows? Yet even if Woods never picks up a club again, it's hard to argue he was anything but the most dominant athlete of the decade.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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