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In the NBC broadcast booth, Johnny Miller got a little swept up in the moment himself, saying Woods could win another 35 to 40 tournaments before his career is over.
That may still happen, though injuries and age could derail Woods at any time. He withdrew from his last tournament with an Achilles tendon strain and, with four surgeries on his left knee over the years, he seems an old 36.
But it's the pursuit of majors that matters most to Woods, and that's another reason why this win was so big. There are four of them now squarely in his wheelhouse this year, and winning one or two would go a long way in getting him off the 14-win mark and pointed toward his childhood goal of beating the record of 18 set by Jack Nicklaus.
The first one of those is the week after next in Augusta, a place where Woods scored his breakthrough win in 1997 and a place he probably knows better than anyone. He scared the leaders with a final-round surge there last year even when he wasn't hitting the ball particularly well, and he will surely go in as a favorite for his fifth green jacket.
The old saying is that the Masters begins on the back nine on Sunday, but this year it may have begun two Sundays early.
"I understand how to play Augusta National, and it's just a matter of executing the game plan," Woods said.
On this Sunday in Florida, his win looked so familiar it was almost as if the 30 months between victories never happened. The golf universe was suddenly at peace again, back in safe hands.
Tiger Woods was celebrating at long last. Maybe we should, too.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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