Tiger Woods Is Back. He Brought Some Nerves, but Left the Pain at Home.
Tiger Woods Is Back. He Brought Some Nerves, but Left the Pain at Home.
Tiger Woods, who will turn 41 next month, practiced on Tuesday ahead of the Hero World Challenge, an unofficial PGA Tour event that he hosts.Credit…Christian Petersen/Getty Images
NASSAU, the Bahamas — Twenty-three minutes into Tiger Woods’s news conference on Tuesday, the skies opened, and rain lashed the roof of the temporary tent where Woods was taking questions, drowning out every fifth or sixth word of his responses. It did not matter. Woods’s body language told the story of how far he has come since last year’s Hero World Challenge.
At the 2015 event, a glum Woods sat slumped in his seat and said that there really was nothing he could look forward to, and that any further success in golf “beyond this will be gravy.”
Twelve months later, Woods smiled easily and sat on a white folding chair on the dais with no apparent physical discomfort. After being sidelined from competitive golf for 15 months because of a back injury that required two operations, Woods looked relaxed and ready to resume his career Thursday in the first round of the Hero World Challenge, the unofficial PGA Tour event that he hosts. The tournament has an 18-man field, 72 holes and no cut.
“There’s nerves, of course, because I care about what I do out there,” Woods said.
But there is no physical pain. “I’m sitting here in front of you guys with a different reality because things have improved so much,” Woods said.
His competitive future was a question mark last December because his balky back made even a sedentary existence difficult.
“There was a lot of trepidation,” he said, adding, “Not being able to get out of bed, not being able to move, how can I expect to come out here and swing a golf club at 120 miles an hour?”
Woods, a 79-time PGA Tour winner who will turn 41 next month, played his last competitive round on Aug. 23, 2015, at the Wyndham Championship in Greensboro, N.C. He closed with a 70 to finish tied for 10th. He was scheduled to play in the opening event of the 2016-17 wraparound season last month in Northern California, but he withdrew a few days after committing to play, describing his game as “vulnerable.”
Part of the problem, Woods said, was that two weeks before his scheduled return, he served as an assistant captain for the victorious United States Ryder Cup team and was not able to squeeze in any practice. On top of that, he had not played the host course, Silverado, since his college days at Stanford.
In his storied career, he has entered — and won — tournaments with less preparation, but it has been more than three years since Woods’s last title. Common sense ultimately prevailed where his competitiveness long reigned.
“I felt like I was ready to compete,” Woods said. “But if I’ve waited at the time, what, 13 months, what’s another couple more months? So let’s be patient, a little easier on myself, a little smarter, and let’s come back when things are a little more together.”
For Woods, a 14-time major champion, there can be no easing back into competition. A video taken of Woods’s swing during his practice round Monday was dissected on social media by scores of armchair instructors.
But he will find no lower-key environment than the Albany Golf Club, a luxury resort playground tucked like a pocket square on southwest New Providence Island. Woods, whose net worth is measured in the hundreds of the millions, has a home in the community, as does Justin Rose, who is in the tournament field.
The golf course, a 40-minute drive from downtown, offers the seclusion that only the wealthy few can buy. Woods listed an abundance of privacy and no paparazzi as the main selling points.
“Albany, we have one-tenth of all the billionaires on the planet here, and that’s saying something,” Woods said. “For them to come down here and feel safe and feel like they can be here and operate and run their businesses but also bring their families and enjoy leisure time here as well, and have that privacy, is incredible.”
During the early stages of the tournament, the credentialed crowd following Woods inside the ropes may rival his galleries in size. Between taking photographs of Woods with his smartphone, a security guard assigned to Woods’s detail said he expected the crowds to be small during the first two rounds before picking up on Saturday and Sunday.
Before 9 a.m. Tuesday, Woods was tailed by about three dozen people, including journalists and representatives of his namesake foundation and the tournament’s title sponsor, Hero MotoCorp, an Indian motorcycle and scooter manufacturer. For an hour, Woods posed for photographs on and beside motorcycles and alongside the Hero chief executive, Pawan Munjal, and granted interviews to print and television reporters from India.
He poked fun at his age, stroking his gray-speckled goatee and joking that he was taki