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"For him to come back after all of this, it's going to be a hell of a mountain to climb."
Making the climb even taller is the emergence of so many young players -- Graeme McDowell at 31 is the oldest of the last four major champions -- and the diminishing aura of Woods. He could get that back by winning, but right now Woods can't even contend.
If his head still is not in the game -- maybe that's why he's missing all those putts -- he now has recurring leg problems.
The Achilles appears to be the biggest problem. Swing coach Sean Foley said he was surprised that Woods looked so sharp during practice rounds last week considering he had gone a month without practicing. On the final hole Woods played at Sawgrass, he hit his driver 40 yards by PGA champion Martin Kaymer. But when Woods climbed out of a bunker behind the green, he appeared to be taking baby steps.
Playing last week probably was a mistake. If Woods had skipped The Players, he would have had three more weeks to let the Achilles heal properly heading into a summer of three majors. Now he's back where he was.
There were four weeks between the Masters and The Players. There are four weeks between The Players and the U.S. Open. It could be that Woods will be in the same shape at Congressional as he was last week at Sawgrass -- one bad swing away from that "chain reaction" in his left leg that caused him to quit after nine holes.
Former PGA champion Paul Azinger once thought Woods for sure would break Snead's record of 82 tour wins (Woods is at 71) and probably would top Nicklaus in the majors, although he never thought it was a lock.
Now he's not so sure about either record.
"The big unknown is the severity of the problem," Azinger said. "The mental aspect still must be addressed -- having the ability to find someone he can talk and talk with. He's angry at himself, angry at the world, angry at people tearing him down. But physically, for the first time, I'm starting to wonder."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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