Trump
awards highest U.S. civilian honor to Tiger Woods
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[May 07, 2019]
By Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When Tiger Woods
won the Masters on April 14, President Donald Trump declared he was
going to award him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and ordered
his aides to schedule the event as soon as possible.
On Monday, Trump got what he asked for. At a ceremony in the
sun-splashed White House Rose Garden, Trump made the 43-year-old
Woods the fourth, and youngest, professional golfer to receive the
nation's highest civilian honor, after Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus
and Charlie Sifford.
With 81 PGA Tour victories, Woods is one shy of Sam Snead's all-time
record, and with 15 major tournament victories, he trails only
Nicklaus, who has 18.
But it was his dramatic Masters victory at Augusta National Golf
Club last month, ending an 11-year major championship drought, that
capped a years-long comeback from injuries and drama in his personal
life, including an arrest two years ago for driving under the
influence.
Trump eagerly leapt onto the Tiger bandwagon. The two have played
golf a number of times, most recently with Nicklaus in February at
Trump's course in Jupiter, Florida.
At a ceremony attended by several U.S. lawmakers, Trump called Woods
"a true legend."
"He's a great guy," said Trump. "He introduced countless new people
to the sport of golf, from every background and walk of life. ...
Tiger Woods is a global symbol of American excellence, devotion and
drive."
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Golfer Tiger Woods is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the
nation's highest civilian honor, by U.S. President Donald Trump in
the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, U.S., May 6, 2019.
REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne?
Woods, wearing a blue suit (not the Masters green jacket) was joined
at the ceremony by his mother, Kultida, his two children, Sam and
Charlie, his girlfriend, Erica Herman, and his caddie, Joe LaCava.
"You've seen the good and the bad the highs and the lows, and I
wouldn't be here without your help," Woods said.
Speaking directly to his loved ones, Woods added: "You guys have
meant so much to me in my life. I've battled and I've tried to hang
in there and I've tried to come back and play a great game of golf
again."
With the golf world wondering if he has enough high-level golf in
him to match Nicklaus' record of 18 majors, Woods left a clue as to
his aspirations, calling his recent Masters experience "certainly
one of the highest that I've accomplished so far in my life on the
golf course."
(Reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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