The Columbus Dispatch

Woods happy to be back in FedEx Cup finale

- By Doug Ferguson

ATLANTA — Tiger Woods is facing long odds of capturing the FedEx Cup and the $10 million bonus.

That’s all relative this year.

Just having his own parking spot at East Lake, being back at the Tour Championsh­ip for the first time since 2013, even feeling lost during a practice round because the nines were flipped, were all reminders that his greatest accomplish­ment this year was being part of the 30-man field.

“I think the season itself has been amazing, Tiger Woods once took for granted that he would end his season at the Tour Championsh­ip. Now, after years of back problems, just being at East Lake feels like an accomplish­ment. to be able to have played this well,” Woods said Wednesday. “I didn’t know how many tournament­s I’d play in, and next thing you know, here I am in the Tour Championsh­ip. ... To have come back from where I’ve come back from and to get here has been a pretty tall order.”

He didn’t make it in 2014 because of his first back surgery and his ill-advised attempt to return too early.

He missed the entire FedEx Cup playoffs in 2015 when he couldn’t chip the ball onto the green from 20 feet away early in the season, and then his back started acting up late in the season. He missed all of 2016 while recovering from two more back surgeries, and all but one PGA Tour event in 2017 because of a fourth back surgery.

Never mind that Woods is at No. 20 in the FedEx Cup standings, having started no worse than No. 3 in his four previous FedEx Cup finales.

This is one tournament where it’s more about the start than the finish.

“It’s great to have accomplish­ed one of the goals I set out at the beginning of the year: to make it back to East Lake to be part of the Tour Championsh­ip and part of these top 30 guys,” he said. “I’ve exceeded a lot of my expectatio­ns and goals because so much of it was an unknown.”

The only thing left to cap off a remarkable comeback would be a trophy. This is his last chance. That still probably wouldn’t be enough for Woods to win the FedEx Cup for the third time — no one else has won it more than once.

The better odds are with the top five seeds — Bryson DeChambeau, Justin Rose, Tony Finau, Dustin Johnson and Justin Thomas — who only have to win the Tour Championsh­ip to take home the richest bonus in golf.

Thomas has even more at stake. No one, not even Woods, has won the FedEx Cup in successive years. Thomas was runner-up at East Lake a year ago, which was enough for him to move past Jordan Spieth and capture the cup.

“I’m excited to have an opportunit­y to do something that no one has ever done, which is pretty cool,” Thomas said.

Woods will be on the charter Sunday night to France for his first Ryder Cup since 2012. He finished 11th in the standings and was as easy choice as a captain’s pick by Jim Furyk.

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