He's
back! Tiger issues Masters warning shot to rivals
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[April 04, 2018]
By Frank Pingue
AUGUSTA, Georgia (Reuters) - Tiger
Woods has not competed at the U.S. Masters since 2015 but that did
not stop the four-times champion from sending a warning shot to his
rivals on Tuesday that echoed through the tall pines that line
Augusta National.
Woods, who has missed three of the previous four Masters due to back
problems, called himself a "walking miracle" and said he is feeling
the best he has in "seven, eight years" heading into Thursday's
opening round.
"I feel great. I feel like I've really put a lot of pieces
together," Woods, who won the most recent of his 14 major titles in
2008, said during his pre-Masters news conference.
"We have worked on what body parts to get stronger, what body parts
need to be more limber, and I feel fantastic. It's just a matter of
now going out there and competing and playing and posting numbers."
The 42-year-old former world number one has enjoyed an on-course
renaissance this year that few expected given the spinal fusion
procedure he had last April that left him sidelined for the better
part of a year.
Woods, who said it was only after playing an exhibition last
December that he felt he would be able to compete in the year's
first major, has since shown flashes of the form that helped him
earn a staggering 79 PGA Tour wins.
"It's been a tough road. I've described a little bit of it, the pain
of just sitting there and the amount of times that I've fallen
because my leg didn't work or I just had to lay on the ground for
extended periods of time. Those are some really dark, dark times,"
said Woods.
"The reason why I say I'm a walking miracle is that I don't know if
-- I don't know if anyone who has had a lower back fusion that can
swing the club as fast as I can swing it. That's incredible."
Stamping his authority as a four-times Masters winner, Woods said
that while he hopes to play his best golf this week he felt he could
slip into a Green Jacket on Sunday evening even if he is not firing
on all cylinders.
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Tiger Woods of the U.S. stands near his golf bag during the second
day of practice for the 2018 Masters golf tournament at Augusta
National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia, U.S. April 3, 2018.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
"This is a tournament I think that where experience does help a lot.
I mean, I have played here and I've won here not playing my absolute
best, but there's got to be a certain part of my game that's on,"
said Woods.
"I think that this tournament really helps with having the
experience and really understanding how to play this particular golf
course."
Woods is one of the favorites to triumph this week in a wide-open
field and the debate about where a possible victory for him would
rank in the annals of sporting comebacks has already begun.
For his part, Woods said he has plenty of work still to do before
entertaining that discussion but did tip his hat to golfing great
Ben Hogan, who came back from a head-on collision with a bus in 1949
to win the U.S. Open the following year.
"I think that one of the greatest comebacks in all of sport is the
gentleman who won here, Mr. Hogan," said Woods, who plays the first
two rounds alongside Australian Marc Leishman and Englishman Tommy
Fleetwood.
"I mean, he got hit by a bus and came back and won major
championships."
(Editing by Toby Davis)
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