Medicine Hat News

Tiger hopes to rekindle magic at most unusual Masters

- PAUL NEWBERRY

Tiger Woods has gotten to spend some extra time with his green jacket.

Maybe that’s just what he needs to rekindle a spark in his magnificen­t game, to prove again that he’s not all washed up.

Nineteen months removed from that magical Sunday at Augusta National — and a quarter-century since he first played the Masters as an amateur — Woods looks very much like an aging golfer whose best days are behind him.

But this hallowed course has always been the place where he shines the brightest, no matter the personal tribulatio­ns, no matter the injuries, no matter the inevitable march of time.

Will the 44-year-old be able to muster those mystical forces one more time?

“Do I expect to contend? Yes, I do,” Woods said Tuesday, not hesitating in the least. “This is a golf course in which having an understand­ing how to play and where to miss it and how to hit the shots around here, it helps. The golf course keeps getting longer. It gets a little bit more difficult as I’ve gotten older and I don’t quite hit it as far. When I first came here, it was a lot of drivers and a lot of wedges.

Now it’s a little bit different and a little bit longer clubs into the holes, but still understand­ing how to play it definitely helps.”

It certainly helped the last time he was here. Having battled through debilitati­ng injuries that threatened to cut short his career, Woods pulled off an electrifyi­ng comeback in the final round to capture his fifth Masters title and 15th major championsh­ip.

The magnitude of the achievemen­t still resonates.

“I thought that it was one of the greatest feats in the history of sports,” Phil Mickelson said. “It was an incredible comeback knowing many of the challenges he has gone through over the last few years prior to the win, and the physical and mental fortitude that it takes to come out on top in a major.”

That was way back in April 2019, nearly a full year before the coronaviru­s pandemic struck and the sports world was thrown upside down.

Usually a rite of spring, the Masters was pushed back all the way to November, where it will be played on an eerie, largely empty course — patrons are not allowed — with leaves falling rather than azaleas blooming.

“It’s not how I wanted to retain the jacket for this long,” Woods said. “Obviously this has been an unpreceden­ted circumstan­ce we’re all dealing with. It’s been incredible to have the jacket and to have it around the house and to share it with people, but to have it this long, it’s not the way I wanted to have it. I wanted to earn it back in April.”

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Tiger Woods

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