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Don’t bet against more magic from Tiger

Woods says putting, neck are in order for Players tourney

- JON MCCARTHY jmccarthy@postmedia.com

Tiger Woods’ only pain in the neck this week might be his putting. Or is it?

A day after arriving at the Players Championsh­ip and putting to bed worries of another prolonged absence, Woods also seemed intent on ending any discussion that his cold putter is an existentia­l threat to his comeback. Meeting with the media after a nine-hole practice round, Woods was asked which concerns him more this week, his neck or his putting?

“Neither,” he said. “I feel good on both. The putting feels so much better as I feel better. That kind of goes hand in hand.”

The two-time Players champion returns to action this week after missing last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitation­al with a neck strain. Woods is coming off back-to-back tournament­s with six three-putts, a first since 1997, raising concerns that the 14-time major champion is fighting Father Time on two fronts. Historical­ly, golfers in their mid-40s don’t continue to putt at the same level they did in the 20s. But comparing Tiger to anyone other than Tiger often is a fool’s game.

From the “In Your Life!” chip at the Masters to the “Better Than Most!” putt on the island green 17th here at TPC Sawgrass, Woods always found the magic. So familiar with his heroics were we, that when he missed, it caused us to do a double take. After enough misses, just when it seemed the magic was gone, it would return.

Same with his swing overhauls, which took him from “This can’t possibly work” to world No. 1 on four separate occasions. Remember the chipping yips? We said he had them, he said he didn’t. We rolled our eyes, he showed up at the Masters a month later and proved the world wrong.

On Tuesday, Woods explained that some of the problems in his putting stemmed from the pain he was feeling in his neck.

“I had been feeling that my stroke has been off, but a lot of it is physically,” he said. “I’m having a hard time getting into the different postures. As my body’s felt better, my stroke has come back a little bit.”

Woods admitted his putter was a little off before the injury exacerbate­d the issue. It had become enough of a problem that Woods has brought in a new coach this week, something he had yet to do in this comeback. On Monday, Woods was spotted working with 33-year-old instructor Matt Killen, who works with several tour players including Justin Thomas.

Despite struggling on the greens, Woods hasn’t finished outside the top 15 this year. If he can stay on the golf course, the putter seems to be the final piece of the puzzle for the 43-year-old.

If golf history repeats itself, the magic could be gone. If Tiger history repeats itself, it will return. Make your bets.

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