Irish Daily Mail

TIGER’S A HERO AGAIN

Woods: I’m proud to have come out the other side

- By DEREK LAWRENSON

AS early Christmas presents for golfers go, what Tiger Woods gave us in the Bahamas last week was right up there with the gift you’ve always wanted.

They say it’s the hope that always kills you but how could the spirit not soar watching him belt the ball past the best golfer in the world this year and start the long and arduous process of turning doubters into believers?

There was no chance of that happening at the Hero World Challenge last week.

That can only happen in full field events next year and he demonstrat­es he is finally over the back problems that have robbed him of the last three years of his playing career.

What we were hoping for from this 18-man exhibition event was some evidence there is still a semblance of the magic he once possessed, with his 42nd birthday coming up later this month and after all he’s been through.

We got that all right and, thrillingl­y, an awful lot more. Indeed, over 72 holes, Woods demonstrat­ed beyond reasonable doubt that if he can stay healthy — a huge if, of course — he can be a winner once more.

From the moment he outdrove Justin Thomas with his opening tee shot on Thursday, Tiger showed he isn’t interested in coming back to make up the numbers. What would be the point in that?

Now he needs his doctors to be proven right with their assessment the make-or-break fusion surgery he had last April will hold up and allow him to put in the hours he needs to be a factor at the top of the game again.

Watching some of the shots Tiger struck yesterday added up to a fulsome tribute to the miracles of modern medicine and the glory of indomitabl­e will. Would he be feeling the lumbar region playing his fourth round in a row? Well, at the par five third, he clipped a two iron off the turf and found the green 265 yards away.

Better still was the driveable par four 7th, where Tiger leaned into his tee shot and found the putting surface 335 yards into the distance. When the 25ft putt crept into the hole on its last breath for an eagle two, the watching Rafa Nadal led the applause.

‘He’s unbelievab­le, isn’t he?’ said the tennis legend, who knows all about trying to beat debilitati­ng injuries.

Here’s how unbelievab­le Tiger is. Not only did he drive the ball accurately, he regularly reached a swing speed of 180 mph. To put that into context, players of the calibre of Sergio Garcia, Justin Rose and Paul Casey haven’t managed that speed all year. That is how good his back is right now. That is why this comeback feels different to others in the past.

On Friday his odds of winning the Masters next April actually fell lower than those of the defending champion Garcia — 251 to 28-1.

Perhaps it was just as well he struggled horribly in the winds that blew in Saturday’s third round, for clearly expectatio­ns need to be tempered for now.

That much was clear with a number of duffed chips and some general short game rustiness. At his final hole of the event, he three putted from no more 15ft. But it all paled beside the good stuff and the fact his love of the fight is plainly undiminish­ed.

Interviewe­d on American television afterwards, he looked five years younger, and the epitome of athleticis­m again, following a 68 to finish eight under in ninth.

‘I’m proud to come out the other side. You know, a bright future.’

Woods (right) didn’t reveal when that future will begin, but the smart money will be somewhere in California next month.

Meanwhile, one of the bright young things who have kept us royally entertaine­d during Tiger’s absence underlined why many think he will break through and win his first major next year.

Rickie Fowler scorched the course for a 61 to finish on 18 under and take the title by four shots from Charley Hoffman.

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