A ‘gift’ just to play
The 14-time major winner plays his 11th event of the year, and only planned tuneup for next month’s British Open, starting Thursday at TPC Potomac.
“I’m pretty excited the way I’ve hit the golf ball. I’ve done some things I haven’t done in over a decade,” Woods said Wednesday.
“No one has had clubhead speeds as what I’ve had on the tour this year with a lower back fusion. These are things that I didn’t know I could do and all of a sudden I’m doing it.”
What the 42-year-old American hasn’t done lately, however, is show the sharp putting that saw him share second at
the Arnold Palmer Invitational in March.
“If I have the same putting stroke I had earlier in the year with the ball-striking I’ve had, that would be where I want to get to,” Woods said. “Just got to put both those things together at the same time.”
Frustration on the greens in recent weeks has prompted Woods to work with an Ardmore mallet putter rather than the Scotty Cameron model he used in 13 major wins and so far in his comeback.
“What changed? I don’t know. That has been the frustrating part,” Woods said. “I’ve had to just log in time and
I haven’t putted well for about four tournaments now. I’ve struggled.
Former world number one Woods, ranked 82nd this week, tested several kinds Wednesday but didn’t guarantee he would use the mallet putter this week.
“I put it in early last week. Tried a bunch of different shapes and sizes,” Woods said. “I tried and tried to come up with something that I felt I could swing and trust.” Woods hasn’t played in his Washington event since 2015 because of back issues, but recalls wondering last year
- sor this year and isn’t expected to return to TPC Potomac on next year’s revamped US PGA schedule.
“The support has been fantastic. We just haven’t got the sponsorship dollars,” Woods said. “This is a tough climate right now and to ask a company for $7, $8, $9 million, it’s tough.”
Woods will play alongside compatriot Bill Haas and Australian Marc