Woods pulls out of Bridgestone
Invitational due to injury
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[August 04, 2014]
(Reuters) - Defending champion Tiger
Woods pulled out of the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in Akron, Ohio on
Sunday after aggravating his troublesome back, raising more questions
about the playing future of the 14-times major champion.
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His participation in Thursday's PGA Championship in Kentucky, the
final major of the year, must be highly doubtful although Woods said
it was too early to speculate.
He also must be considered increasingly unlikely to be on the
American team for next month’s Ryder Cup in Scotland.
He looked to be in pain after his drive at the ninth hole of the
final round before deciding to retire on four over par, 18 shots
behind overnight leader Sergio Garcia at Firestone Country Club.
Woods, who had made a double-bogey on the seventh hole, was limping
as he climbed into a golf cart and left the course. He later issued
a short statement.
"It happened on the second hole when I hit my second shot. I fell
back in the bunker. I just jarred it and it's been spasming ever
since," he said.
"It's just the whole lower back. I don't know what happened when I
landed.“
The latest injury setback comes barely four months after Woods had
lower back surgery to relieve an impinged nerve.
He had the procedure after intense pain caused him to pull out of
the Honda Classic on March 2, also during the final round.
The 38-year-old missed the first two majors of the year, the Masters
and U.S. Open, and the Bridgestone Invitational was just his third
event since he returned to action.
He has long been driven by a burning desire to surpass the record of
18 major titles held by Jack Nicklaus.
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But he has not won a major since the 2008 U.S. Open, and has reached an
age after which nobody in the modern era has regularly won major
championships, even fully healthy.
Even before his latest setback he struggled to drive the ball as well as
the current crop of top players such as Rory McIlroy, Adam Scott and
Garcia.
Woods showed no immediate sign of distress after hitting his second shot
from an awkward lie in lush rough above a bunker at the par-five second
hole on Sunday.
He lost his balance after playing the shot but stayed on his feet as he
trotted eight paces through the sand back to the fairway.
But he was in obvious pain by the fifth hole, where he winced in pain
after his tee shot.
(Reporting by Andrew Both, editing by Ed Osmond and Gene Cherry)
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