Global
game missing 'Tiger' factor, says top executive
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[February 26, 2016]
By Rick Horrow
(Reuters) - While exciting young guns
Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day have been pivotal in drawing a
wide audience to the game, the sport is missing the 'Tiger' factor when
it comes to 'fringe fans', says a leading golf executive.
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Tiger Woods, the greatest player of his generation and arguably of
all time, has not competed since August after enduring setbacks in
his recovery from back surgeries and has not set a timetable for his
return to the PGA Tour.
"You can never replace Tiger Woods, just like you can't replace
Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, and Gary Player," Ken Kennerly,
executive director of the PGA Tour's Honda Classic which is being
played this week, told Reuters.
"Tiger, it's difficult to replace him. In my opinion, without him in
the game, we're missing something.
"Tiger Woods is still Tiger Woods, and when he showed up at the
Wyndham Championship last year in August and played well, and was
(in) one of the last couple (of) final groups ... the (television)
ratings were off the charts."
Woods had his best tournament in nearly two years at the Wyndham
Championship in North Carolina where he flirted with the lead but
missed several birdie opportunities in the final round before
finishing four strokes behind winner Davis Love III.
"Does it minimize the negative impact that Tiger has by not
participating? Probably a little," said Kennerly, who is also a golf
executive with sports management company IMG.
"He still delivers that fringe fan that golf needs. We saw it
directly when Tiger hurt himself and couldn't play last year's Honda
Classic ... the spike in ticket sales we normally get leading up to
the tournament had softened a little bit.
"What does that mean in dollars and cents? Probably a couple of
hundred thousand dollars that we did not see, that would have come
through the gates because people still wanted to see Tiger. He is
still an enormous asset for this game."
While the timing of 14-times major champion Woods' return to the
game is still unknown, Kennerly is excited by the impact already
made by American world number one Spieth, second-ranked Australian
Day and third-ranked McIlroy of Northern Ireland.
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"Luckily with Rory and Rickie (Fowler) and Jordan and Jason Day, and
Bubba (Watson) and Adam Scott, and all these guys ... we have great
young players that are certainly carrying their own weight,"
Kennerly said.
"Look at Rickie Fowler, what he's done this year. They (Spieth, Day
and McIlroy) came out very boldly with talk of the next 'Big Three',
and then Rickie rebounded.
"He made a statement at HSBC and then at Phoenix a couple of weeks
ago where he almost won."
American Fowler fought off a late charge from McIlroy and Belgian
Thomas Pieters to win the European Tour's Abu Dhabi HSBC
Championship last month before losing out in a playoff with Japan's
Hideki Matsuyama for the Phoenix Open two weeks later.
Those performances lifted the 27-year-old Fowler to fourth in the
world rankings, prompting speculation about the development of a
'Big Four' of young guns along with Spieth, aged 22, Day (28) and
McIlroy (26).
(Writing by Mark Lamport-Stokes; Editing by Frank Pingue)
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