Chattanooga Times Free Press

Christmas for golf fans

Red, green key colors for this year’s Masters

- BY DOUG FERGUSON

This Masters is as much about a red shirt as a green jacket.

Tiger Woods will compete in the year’s first major for only the second time since 2013, and what will make the sight of him at Augusta National Golf Club even more tantalizin­g is that Woods is starting to look like the player who dominated his sport for nearly 15 years.

He has power. His short game is sharp. He makes putts.

Never mind that Woods is not ranked among the top 100 players in the world. Or that it has been 13 years since he last won the Masters in that Sunday red shirt, and four years and eight months since he last won any tournament.

The buzz following Woods since his return from a fourth back surgery has been bigger and louder than when he was No. 1 in the world, piling up 79 victories on the PGA Tour and 14 major championsh­ips. The longer he was away from the game, the more his feats looked even more legendary. And the longer he was gone, the more plausible it was Woods might never return, at least not at a competitiv­e level.

In his last three starts leading to the Masters, Woods was within one shot of the lead at some point in the final round. On his final hole at the Valspar Championsh­ip, he was a 40-foot birdie putt away from forcing a playoff.

That prompted Jason Day to say, “For him to come back and win … I don’t think it’s going to be a huge surprise now.”

As much as golf has missed the energy he brings to a tournament, Woods has missed golf, especially that first full week in April.

He has been to Augusta National the past two years for the champions’ dinners. Just like always, Woods walked up the stairs to the locker room reserved for Masters champions. But there were no clubs. No boxes of golf balls. No need to register. No tee time.

“Very frustratin­g,” Woods said. “Because I love playing Augusta National. I love it. And I know how to play it. Sometimes I don’t play it well, but I know how to play it. 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.”

Can he win? It seems like such an absurd thought considerin­g where Woods was even a year ago.

At the champions’ dinner last year, he told Jack Nicklaus how much he was hurting, and Nick Faldo was struck by the negative tone. Woods had fusion surgery on his lower back two weeks later. Then, in another low moment, he was arrested in the early hours of Memorial Day on a DUI charge when Florida police found him asleep behind the wheel of his car.

The image of Woods pumping his fist in that red shirt was replaced by the sunken eyes of his mug shot. Woods attributed it to a bad combinatio­n of prescripti­on drugs and sought treatment.

He sure didn’t look like a Masters favorite then. He didn’t look like one just more than six months ago at the Presidents Cup, where as an assistant captain he said he could picture a scenario in which he didn’t return to competitio­n at all.

Now he has one thing in mind: another green jacket.

“I’m just building toward April,” he said. The biggest obstacle for Woods? So is everyone else.

Adding to the anticipati­on of the Masters, which starts Thursday, is that all the best players are hitting their stride. In the first 12 weeks, 11 golfers who won on the PGA Tour already were eligible for the Masters.

That list even includes Phil Mickelson, still going strong, as capable as ever to win a fourth Masters and become the oldest champion at age 47. His recent playoff victory over Justin Thomas in the Mexico Championsh­ip was the validation Lefty needed.

“I needed to get a win before Augusta so I wasn’t trying to win for the first time in 4 1/2 years at that event,” Mickelson said. “This certainly boosts my confidence and gives me a lot of encouragem­ent.”

Woods, Thomas, Dustin Johnson and Rory McIlroy are the betting favorites this week.

Johnson won the Tournament of Champions by eight shots to start the year. Thomas used two bold shots to take the Honda Classic title via playoff in February. McIlroy birdied five of his last six holes to win the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al last month. Two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson ended two years without a victory by winning the Genesis Open in February and the Match Play — a World Golf Championsh­ip — last week.

Three players have a shot at the career Grand Slam this year, and it starts with McIlroy at the Masters, who for the fourth year needs only a green jacket to compete the greatest collection in golf. (Getting their opportunit­ies later: Mickelson at the U.S. Open and Jordan Spieth at the PGA Championsh­ip.)

Johnson will make progress simply by teeing off Thursday. He was denied that last year after he slipped down the wooden staircase of his rental home in Augusta on the eve of the tournament and had to withdraw with a back injury. He was the clear favorite a year ago, the winner of three straight tournament­s.

A man of few thoughts except for the shot ahead of him, Johnson prefers not to dwell on the memories of last year.

“Why? There’s nothing you can do about it,” he said. “That has nothing to do with anything that is happening now.”

Woods, too, is all about moving forward. Gone, at least for now, are the back problems that kept the starter on the first tee at Augusta National from uttering four words so many golf fans long to hear: “Fore, please. Tiger Woods.”

For those who felt as though the Masters could not get here soon enough, Woods was right there with them.

“Very eager,” he said with a smile. “I feel like I’m physically able to do it again. And it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Tiger Woods, right, gets the green jacket from Phil Mickelson after winning the 2005 Masters. Woods is back at Augusta National for only the second time in the last five years and is starting to look like the player who dominated golf for the better...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Tiger Woods, right, gets the green jacket from Phil Mickelson after winning the 2005 Masters. Woods is back at Augusta National for only the second time in the last five years and is starting to look like the player who dominated golf for the better...

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