The Borneo Post

Woods brings comeback to happy hunting ground at Bay Hill

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ORLANDO: Tiger Woods takes his rousing comeback tour to one of his favourite haunts - Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill layout, where the 14- time major winner has triumphed eight times.

Woods not only feels supremely conf ident on the track, but cherishes the time spent with Palmer, who traditiona­lly greeted the tournament winner on the last green in the city Woods formerly called home.

“To be able to wi n thi s tournament and to have Arnold there and to shake his hand and for him to give me a big hug and a couple of times he says: ‘I called it, I knew you were going to make that putt.’

“It was little things like that ... sharing jokes with him out there on the green and he and I laughing. Those are moments that unfortunat­ely I’ll never have, but I have those memories,” Woods told reporters ahead of Thursday’s opening round of the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al.

The 42-year- old Woods had a long relationsh­ip with seven-time major winner Palmer, who died in September 2016 aged 87.

“I first met Arnold when I played here in the US Junior when I was 15,” said Woods. “And then I moved here in ‘96 and he invited me over here to play in his Monday shootout and I did and I didn’t like it very much because he took my money.

Just keep getting better. Just keep making incrementa­l improvemen­ts and I think I’ve done that. Tiger Woods, former world number one

“But I thoroughly enjoyed being around him, being with him and we had so many great times. None more so than last time I won here (in 2013)... We sat down, we just started to BS and have a great time together and I’m going to miss those times, for sure.”

That was the last year Woods won a PGA Tour title but the 42year- old looks like he may finally be over the back injuries that sidelined him and limited his ability to swing the club.

His runner-up finish last week at the Valspar Championsh­ip has lifted his confidence and given him hope of ending his five-year Tour title drought and maybe adding to his major haul for the first time since 2008 at next month’s Masters. Woods said he is taking it one step at a time since returning to competitio­n this year after spinal fusion surgery one year ago.

“Just keep getting bet ter. Just keep making incrementa­l improvemen­ts and I think I’ve done that,” he said.

“Each and every week I’ve learned from what I’ve done and more importantl­y I’m learning my body. I’m learning how I can swing it and not swing it... these are all things that are new. So I’m still learning, I’m getting a lot better at it. I think that you’re starting to see the fruits of that now of the little tweaks I’ve made and I’m excited about it.”

Woods may be taking one step at a time, but he cannot help but get psyched up about a return to the field at Augusta.

“I love playing Augusta National. I love it. And I know how to play it,” said the four- time Masters champion. “Just me being out there on those greens and hitting putts and being creative... there’s no other golf course like it in the world and there’s no other golf tournament like it. It’s a players’ heaven.” — Reuters

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