Tiger getting professional help to manage back pain, sleep issues
Tiger Woods, arrested three weeks ago for impaired driving, said he is receiving “professional help” to manage his medications and help cope with back pain and a sleep disorder.
Woods, a 14-time major golf champion who has not won a PGA Tour title since 2013, was arrested May 29 when police in Jupiter, Florida, found him asleep at the wheel of his car on a road.
A police report uncovered by The Golf Channel said Woods told authorities he had not been drinking but had a reaction to several prescription drugs, including Xanax, which can be used to treat insomnia.
Woods, 41, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol, although he did not show any sign of alcohol in a breathalyzer test. His arraignment has been set for August 9.
In his first comments since the release of police video footage showing him struggling to pass a sobriety test, Woods said he has sought aid in fighting medicating issues.
“I’m currently receiving professional help to manage my medications and the ways that I deal with back pain and a sleep disorder,” Woods wrote in a posting on Twitter.
“I want to thank everyone for the amazing outpouring of support and understanding, especially the fans and players on tour.”
Leigh Steinberg, Woods’s agent, told ESPN that Woods was undergoing “in-patient treatment.”
Top seed and world number one Andy Murray will have a new opponent for the opening match of his title defence at the Aegon Championships on Tuesday after fellow Briton Aljaz Bedene withdrew from the Queen’s Club event with a wrist injury.
Lucky loser Jordan Thompson of Australia will replace him in the third match on centre court.