The Bakersfield Californian

Tiger’s return doesn’t mean a return to normal

- DOUG FERGUSON

The PGA Tour has been back for five weeks and already has delivered a tournament scoring record one week, a former No. 1 winning another week, two sudden-death playoffs and a player who grew by two shirt sizes to try to change the game.

And it still felt as though something was missing.

Or someone.

That changed a few minutes past 7 a.m. Tuesday when Tiger Woods pulled his courtesy car into the parking lot at Muirfield

Village, changed his shoes and began preparatio­ns for his first PGA Tour event in five months.

He was wearing a mask.

The return of Woods is not the return to normal, except for those watching on television.

Woods had an idea of what to expect from seeing empty golf courses at Colonial and Harbour Town and even last week at Muirfield Village. He has heard from friends on tour how eerie it is with no fans, no cheering.

“It’s a very different world out here not to have the distractio­ns, the noise, the excitement, the energy that the fans bring,” Woods said. “It’s just a silent and different world.”

And it’s going to stay that way. The PGA Tour returned June 11, and the Memorial was supposed to be the first tournament with fans, at 20 percent capacity, until coronaviru­s cases began to spike and the prudent action was to play it safe. The “Nicklaus Club” hospitalit­y tent is still to the right of the 16th tee. A small grandstand overlooks the 18th green. There wasn’t time to dismantle them.

Four more tournament­s announced Monday they won’t have spectators, all the way through the Tour Championsh­ip to end the FedEx Cup season.

They’re still playing, though. And now, so is Woods.

“I think he was starting to get a little sassy,” Justin Thomas said over the weekend. “I was telling him he’s scared to come out and play against all of us when he’s sitting at home, just trying to give him a hard time. But yeah, we’re excited to have him out.”

Woods and Thomas played the back nine Tuesday morning with just over a dozen people watching, mainly media. That’s not entirely new for Woods. The final round of his victory in Japan had no spectators because of flooding. The third round of the AT&T National in 2012 had no fans because of a freak wind storm that toppled 75foot trees at Congressio­nal.

They were back the next day. They won’t be at Muirfield Village all week.

They will be missing as Woods, a five-time winner of the tournament Jack Nicklaus built, goes after his 83rd career victory to break the PGA Tour record he shares with Sam Snead.

Three tournament­s ago for Woods was nearly nine months ago.

It’s a different world now, a phrase Woods used five times Tuesday.

It’s everyone’s world.

But just seeing him at Muirfield Village gave the golf world a slight sense of normalcy.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS / AP ?? Tiger Woods putts on the 13th green Tuesday during a practice round for the Memorial in Dublin, Ohio.
DARRON CUMMINGS / AP Tiger Woods putts on the 13th green Tuesday during a practice round for the Memorial in Dublin, Ohio.

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