Medical experts not ruling out Woods making a return
LOS ANGELES: Tiger Woods could return to competitive golf within a year, top orthopaedic surgeons said yesterday, but the road back from serious leg injuries sustained in a car crash will be a long and gruelling one.
Already credited with one of sport’s great comebacks when he returned from back surgery to win a fifth Masters in 2019, ending an 11year majors drought, Woods will have to be even more resilient if he is to overcome the damage done in Wednesday’s accident.
The 45yearold golf great was hospitalised in Los Angeles and underwent emergency surgery for injuries suffered when his sport utility vehicle careened off a road and rolled down a hillside.
Woods sustained compound fractures of his tibia and fibula to his right leg in the early morning crash along with additional injuries to his foot and ankle, according to a statement posted on the former world No 1’s official Twitter account.
He also suffered trauma to the muscle and other soft tissue of the leg.
The devastating injuries have raised concerns over whether Woods will return to competitive golf, with any comeback further complicated by his long history of knee and back problems.
But orthopaedic surgeons approached on the matter agreed that, based on the information so far available, the 15time major winner could return possibly within a year.
‘‘What I have learned through my career taking care of athletes, particularly at that level — don’t count them out,’’ Dr Victor Khabie, chief of surgery and codirector of the Orthopaedics and Spine Institute, Northern Westchester Hospital, in Mt Kisco, New York said.
‘‘I would say a year.
‘‘It probably takes about 12 weeks to four months for the bone to actually heal.
‘‘And then after that intense rehab, realistically, probably a full year before he is back playing at a high level.’’
Experts warn there are many unknowns Woods might have to navigate before attempting any comeback.
Concern over infection is at the top of that list, followed by potential nerve damage and debilitating arthritis should the ankle injury be more severe.
But if there were no major complications, it was possible Woods could be ready to tee it up at next year’s Masters, Dr Riley Williams, sports medicine surgeon at New York’s Hospital for Special Surgery, said.
‘‘He has the right psychological makeup and [is] obviously very focused and driven,’’ Williams, who operated on and managed NBA player Paul George’s compound fracture in 2014, said.
‘‘Let’s assume in the most straightforward case we’ve got good bone healing by 12 weeks and then another three months of general recovery.
‘‘I could see him being on the range six to 12 months after surgery,’’ he said.
‘‘The Masters next year is certainly within reason, again barring some unknown complicating factors.’’
Dr Nicholas DiNubile, spokesman for the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, said elite athletes possessed all the tools to deal with such adversity, but in this case, since Woods was 45, the question was whether he would want to go through the grind one more time.
‘‘This is as serious as it gets when you have an open fracture because of the risk of infection,’’ DiNubile said.
‘‘Tiger Woods, of everything I have read about him, is a really tough guy. He has been through a lot injuries.
‘‘He used to train with the Navy Seals and it sounds like even at the scene of the accident he was trying to get out of the car on his own,’’ he said.
‘‘I wouldn’t [write him off]. The thing against him is his age and at this point in his career does he need to do that?’’