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"Tiger has been the best player in the world for a very long time," Clarke said. "He has been the guy over my career that has set the benchmark for all the rest of us, and personally he's a good friend of mine. It is fantastic, I think, not just for you guys but for all of world golf just to see Tiger Woods back playing again. I'm sure he will be trying to get himself back up to where he has been before, and personally I don't doubt he'll do that.
"But for us to have a chance to compete against him again can only be good for the game in general."
Woods still managed to make news while not playing when he fired his caddie, Steve Williams, after a 12-year partnership during which he won 13 majors. For all the talk about disloyalty -- Williams caddied for Adam Scott at the U.S. Open, then again at the AT&T National without seeking permission -- Woods said only that it was "time for a change."
"I felt that Stevie and I have had just an amazing run," he said. "Steve is a hell of a caddie, there's no denying that. He's helped my career, and I think I've helped his, as well. We've had a great partnership for 12 years, maybe a little bit more than that, won a bunch of tournaments. I just felt it was time to change things up a little bit. I felt very comfortable with the move."
He did not bite when asked about Williams' comments to a New Zealand television station that he had wasted the last two years of his life.
"That's what he says and what he feels," Woods said.
In his place is Bell, who last caddied for Woods at the 2005 Disney Classic, and previously worked for Woods when he won the 1996 U.S. Amateur and the 1999 Buick Invitational at Torrey Pines.
Woods said Bell is only a fill-in -- "Have you seen his legs?" he said -- and there no timetable for getting a permanent replacement. The only sense of urgency for Woods is his results.
Because he has missed so much golf -- and didn't play all that great early in the year -- he has plunged to No. 135 in the FedEx Cup standings. He needs to crack the top 125 after this World Golf Championship and the PGA Championship to qualify for the playoffs. He could take care of that with a top 10 finish at Firestone, where only once in his career -- last year -- has he finished lower than fifth.
"I really hope that he will play well," said PGA champion Martin Kaymer, who played with Woods at TPC Sawgrass, at least for nine holes. "We need him. We really need him. He's the best player who ever played that game, and obviously he's struggling a little bit at the moment, but I just hope that he can go back to basics and show us how great of a golf player he is."
Whatever rust Woods has won't be known until Thursday, when his shots count.
He played nine holes Tuesday, often hitting more than one shot when he wasn't pleased with where it was going. But it was only practice. Woods won't get a good sense of where his game is until the first round Thursday.
"I'm just focused on trying to win a golf tournament," he said. "That's it."
[Associated Press;
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