Chattanooga Times Free Press

New biography traces Tiger Woods’ mythical rise and fall

- BY DWIGHT GARNER NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

There have been many biographie­s of Tiger Woods, and surely there will be many more. Some are friendly and shyly philosophi­cal, like David Owen’s early “The Chosen One,” from 2001. Others are curmudgeon­ly and expert about golf, like Tom Callahan’s “His Father’s Son” (2010).

Amid these books, “Tiger Woods,” the new biography from Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian (Simon & Schuster, 490 pages, $30), rides in as if on 18 wheels, for better and only occasional­ly worse. It’s a confident and substantia­l book that’s nearly as sleek as a Christophe­r Nolan movie. It makes a sweet sound, like a wellstruck golf ball.

I found it exhilarati­ng, depressing, tawdry and moving in almost equal measure. It’s a big American story that rolls across barbered lawns and then leaves you stranded in some all-night Sam’s Club of the soul. It reminded me of a line from Martin Amis’ new book of essays: “How drunk was Scott Fitzgerald when he said there were no second acts in American lives?”

The authors have hoovered up everything there is to be learned from previous writing about Woods and then interviewe­d more than 250 people on their own. (They declined to interview Woods after he set draconian conditions.) They bring grainy new detail to almost every aspect of Woods’ life.

Better, they have a knack for scene-setting. They tuck us inside Woods’ private plane as the desert gives way to Las Vegas’ megaresort­s to open a chapter about Woods’ exploits in that city, sometimes with Michael Jordan or Charles Barkley in tow. They refresh old stories by telling them from new angles.

This biography begins the only way it probably could have: with the car accident at Woods’ home on the day after Thanksgivi­ng in 2009 that precipitat­ed his steep fall from grace. He groggily ran over hedges and curbs and smashed into a fire hydrant after his wife, Elin, who had learned of his adultery, apparently smashed his SUV windows with a golf club.

At the time, Elin didn’t know the half of it. Woods’ paramours (strippers, waitresses, neighbors) began popping up from behind every swizzle stick. The scandal was on the cover of The New York Post for 21 consecutiv­e days; each issue was so sleazy you wanted to pick it up with tongs. (The Sept. 11 attacks, by contrast, managed only 20 straight covers.) This was a purge of schadenfre­ude. Many were delighted to see this ostensible paragon of virtue take a fall.

Woods, the greatest athlete of our time, has not won a major tournament since. But he is healthy and playing well and has his sights on the Masters in a few weeks. This story might easily have another twist.

Benedict is a writer for Sports Illustrate­d. Keteyian is a CBS News correspond­ent. Together they are the authors of a previous book, “The System: The Glory and Scandal of Big-Time College Football” (2013).

In “Tiger Woods” they take special aim at Woods’ parents, especially Earl Woods, Tiger’s father. They raised a champion. They also raised a narcissist­ic loner who lacked basic decency. “Even the most basic human civilities — a simple hello or thank you — routinely went missing from his vocabulary. A nod was too much to expect.”

This book is littered with the bodies of those Woods cut out of his life without a thank you or goodbye — girlfriend­s, coaches, agents, caddies. If you stripped most of the golf out of this book, you might sometimes think you are reading the biography of a sociopath, a nonmurdero­us Tom Ripley or Patrick Bateman or Svidrigail­ov from “Crime and Punishment.”

Earl Woods, the worst kind of stage father, profited early and often from his son’s career. He was a liar and an adulterer. The later years of his life were particular­ly sordid. He hired multiple young women to attend to his needs.

“Pornograph­y played steadily on the television,” the authors write. “Sex toys were stuffed in drawers, and sexual favors were performed at Earl’s request. ‘It was a house of horrors,’ recalled a former employee. ‘Every drawer. Every cabinet.’”

There is beauty and awe in this perfectly pitched biography, as we watch Woods’ skills blossom. Woods was shy and nerdy in his first years of high school. No one knew of his golf exploits. The moment here in which an early girlfriend, Dina Gravell, watches him play for the first time is terrific. It’s as if she’s discovered that he’s Harry Potter.

Lovely too is the scene the authors set when Woods wins his first Masters. Woods looks up — at this tournament in which the first black man, Lee Elder, played in 1975 — and “witnesses the abundance of black people from the Augusta staff who had left their posts and assembled on the lawn and the veranda on the second floor.”

If this book has a flaw it may be that it’s too confident. Reading it can be like watching one of those crime shows in which the bumper music ends with slamming car doors. The authors move about like a supersleut­h Starsky and Hutch, or Tango and Cash, or Crockett and Tubbs. To be fair, a bit of wit and play are allowed to sneak in.

Who is Tiger Woods? The authors don’t get to the bottom of that question, but does anyone really expect that they could? Woods himself doesn’t appear to have a clue.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PHELAN M. EBENHACK ?? Tiger Woods lines up a putt on the second green during the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al golf tournament Sunday, March 18, in Orlando, Fla.
AP PHOTO/PHELAN M. EBENHACK Tiger Woods lines up a putt on the second green during the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al golf tournament Sunday, March 18, in Orlando, Fla.

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