The Herald (South Africa)

Tiger Woods lurks at wide-open Masters

Golfer in best form in years, but no longer terrifying opponents

- Craig Ray

TIGER Woods is the story of the 2018 Masters and whoever the winner is on Sunday night‚ if it is not the great man himself the champion would have had to overcome Augusta‚ the pressure and Tiger.

The season’s first major is also the most keenly awaited, with Woods showing his best form in more than five years while many of the usual contenders also appear to be peaking.

Although he won the last of his four Masters titles in 2005 and the last of his 14 majors at the US Open in 2008‚ Woods has not looked more in control of his game in years.

If he gets on a run at Augusta‚ the roars from the massive galleries will send shivers through the field.

But the fear Tiger once instilled in opponents has been diluted‚ and a generation of players have emerged without years of scarring inflicted by the greatest modern-era player.

Jordan Spieth‚ the 2015 champion‚ was raised watching Woods dominate without suffering at Tiger’s ruthlessne­ss.

He does not fear Tiger and has already claimed a green jacket to lift his own confidence.

Spieth was third in Houston last week and his game is tracking well.

He has a win‚ two seconds and an 11th-placed finish in four Masters appearance­s. No one is better at Augusta.

Three-time Masters winner Phil Mickelson is a threat after winning his first PGA tournament in five years in Mexico earlier this season‚ while two-time winner Bubba Watson won the WGC World Matchplay 11 days ago.

Defending champion Sergio Garcia is demonstrat­ing good form, as is Swede Henrik Stenson‚ who was in the mix in Houston last week.

Englishman Justin Rose‚ who lost last year’s play-off against Garcia‚ has been consistent­ly good throughout 2018 and has two top fives in his last two tournament­s.

Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy is purring along nicely after winning the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al three weeks ago.

McIlroy is looking to complete the career Grand Slam at Augusta and there are reasons to take his challenge seriously.

Throw in world No 1 Dustin Johnson and No 2 Justin Thomas‚ along with Jason Day and red-hot European Tour pace-setter Tommy Fleetwood and the permutatio­ns appear endless.

But Woods is regaining the aura he once had. His Sunday charges at the Valspar Championsh­ip and Arnold Palmer recently indicated he is back after years of battling an ailing back.

At a course where he has won four times and had six top fives‚ including three runners-up finishes‚ a fit Woods is the name everyone expects to see in the mix on Sunday afternoon.

“I have four rounds to play‚ so let’s just kind of slow down‚” Woods said on Tuesday. “I’ve had anticipati­on like this before. If you remember the buildup was from the US PGA Championsh­ip of 2000 to the Masters of 2001‚ nine months of building up‚ what that tournament would mean.

“And it’s the same thing. I have got to go play and then let the chips fall where they may. Hopefully I end up on top but I have got a lot of work to do between now and then.

“I’ve played well over the years‚ I’ve won here a few times. But all those years that I’ve won‚ one part of my game has certainly stood out.

“Whether it’s driving the ball like I did in 1997 and putting it a couple of years where I really putted well‚ or hitting my irons and hitting a lot of greens‚ but missing in the correct spots every single time‚ there’s got to be a certain part of my game that’s got to be on‚ and hopefully this will be one of those weeks.

“I don’t think there’s one clear-cut favourite. I think there are so many guys playing well at the same time. I think that’s what is making this year’s Masters so exciting.”

South Africa has five players – 2008 champion Trevor Immelman‚ 2011 champion Charl Schwartzel‚ 2012 runner-up Louis Oosthuizen‚ Brandon Grace and debutant Dylan Frittelli – in the field.

Oosthuizen is paired with Spieth and in-form Swede Alex Noren in the second-to-last group for the first round.

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