Houston Chronicle

Woods savors ‘most historic one’

- By Sam Farmer

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Gusting winds rippled the roof of the supermarke­t-sized media tent Tuesday, creating an intermitte­nt thunder effect as Tiger Woods discussed his sixth — and maybe most significan­t — Open Championsh­ip on these hallowed grounds.

He knows just how hard this course can be when the weather turns.

“You get winds like we did today, it’s a helluva test,” said Woods, who won two of his three claret jugs here, in 2000 and 2005. “On 10, I hit a six iron from 120 yards it was blowing so hard. You don’t have opportunit­ies to hit shots like that anywhere else. Then again, if you get a calm day on this golf course, you can see players probably have four to five eagle putts.”

Woods, 46, has survived more than his share of personal storms, the most recent being the rollover accident in 2021 on a California road.

First, he regained his ability to walk. Then, astounding­ly, to compete. He has played in two tournament­s this year, finishing 47th at the Masters and withdrawin­g after the third round of the PGA Championsh­ip at Southern Hills, struggling with foot and leg pain.

Now, he has returned to his favorite course and feels as well as he has, post-accident, acknowledg­ing: “My body certainly can get better, but realistica­lly, not a whole lot.”

“For the most part of my rehab, I was just hoping I could walk again, you know, walk normal and have a normal life and maybe play a little hit-andgiggle golf with my son or my friends at home,” he said.

“But lo and behold, I’ve played championsh­ip golf this year. And once I realized that I could possibly play at a high level, my focus was to get back here at St. Andrews to play in this championsh­ip, (it) being the most historic one we’ve had. I just didn’t want to miss this Open here at the home of golf.”

Woods said the Old Course is noticeably different than when he played here for the first time, as an amateur.

“They’ve lengthened a few holes since I first played here in ’95,” he said, noting the changes to No. 8, the only par-3 on the outward nine, a hole that’s playing 13 yards longer than when the Open was here in 2015.

“I think every pot bunker has gotten a little bit deeper. It’s kind of funny when I look back at some of the historic videos of the guys playing out of the Road Hole bunker, and it really wasn’t that deep. Now you can’t see the grandstand­s when you get in there. All you see is clear blue sky.”

Blue skies could be in short supply this week, with sporadic rains a distinct possibilit­y over the next couple of days. The forecast calls for drier, warmer weather beginning Saturday, but foul weather can roll through at any point.

“I remember coming around here my very first practice round,” Woods said. “I couldn’t believe how stupidly hard this place is, because I played every hole into the wind. ‘Where do you drive these par 4s? This is not what people say it is.’ All of a sudden it changes and I see, no, these bunkers are in play.

”It’s amazing ingenuity that they had then, that this golf course stood the test of time to the best players. And as long as we’ve gotten collective­ly as a field, this golf course is still a challenge.“

Woods has a photo in his office from that first practice round, one of him crossing the iconic Swilcan Bridge on the 18th fairway. Virtually everyone who plays St. Andrews gets a shot like that, and that stone crossing of the Swilcan Burn is where the legendary Jack Nicklaus gave his farewell to profession­al golf in 2005.

”I mean, the history and the people that have walked over that bridge,“Woods said. ”I tell you what, honestly, now I have to be a little more careful with spikes on that bridge. I don’t have quite the agility that I used to. I almost ate it today.“

On Monday, Woods played a four-hole exhibition with Nicklaus, Lee Trevino and Rory McIlroy, and the foursome posed for pictures on the bridge.

”To have Lee, Rory and Jack, and just stand there with them, that’s history right there,“he said. ”Those guys are … . I watched them play this Open Championsh­ip, waking up, the telecast would come on at 5 a.m. on the West Coast. To get a chance to watch them play and to see them hit the shots … .”

Traditiona­lly, the Open is played at St. Andrews every five years. Not a surprise, but Woods said this could be his last on the Old Course.

”I’m not going to play a full schedule ever again,“he said. ”My body just won’t allow me to do that. I don’t know how many Open Championsh­ips I have left here at St. Andrews, but I wanted this one.“

 ?? Warren Little/Getty Images ?? Playing in the 150th version of the Open Championsh­ip at St. Andrews was an important goal to Tiger Woods.
Warren Little/Getty Images Playing in the 150th version of the Open Championsh­ip at St. Andrews was an important goal to Tiger Woods.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States