The Day

TV ratings show ‘Tiger Effect’ remains strong Tebow’s season likely over

- By MICHAEL CUNNINGHAM

Over the weekend Tiger Woods was in contention to win the British Open at Carnoustie, Scotland. He had a lead on the 11th hole before fading to a tie for sixth, three strokes behind winner Francesco Molinari.

But Woods had a real chance to win a major for the first time in a long time.

It was reported that NBC drew a 5 rating in the Nielsen overnights from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. ET. The ratings were up 38 percent from last year's round.

This correlatio­n between Woods playing well in a big tournament and more people watching is nothing new. There was a time when the “Tiger Effect” extended to the entire golf industry: higher tournament attendance, more recreation­al rounds played, increased youth participat­ion, spikes in sales of golf equipment and apparel.

But that's back when Woods was the best golfer in the world by a large margin. He was seemingly on track to soar past Jack Nicklaus' record of 18 major championsh­ips. Woods has been stuck on 14 majors won since 2008 and hasn't won any tournament since 2013.

The Open answered any questions about whether Woods still is a draw after his game slipped for much of a decade. He was back in the hunt at a major and, just like that, the eyeballs returned to NBC's telecast.

After all these years, still nothing gets the casual fan to pay attention to golf like Woods making a charge on Sunday. And now you can add his comeback story to talent, race, and history as the sources of his appeal.

Woods inspired an entire generation of youth to take up golf seriously and emulate his long-hitting style. Some of those youngsters grew up to join the PGA Tour and were good enough to beat Woods at about the same time he began to succumb to injuries and the self-inflicted implosion of his personal life. (Serena Williams stirred a similar revolution in tennis but, unlike Woods, she fended off the youngsters and has shown little evidence of decline.)

At 42 years old, Woods no longer is in his prime. He is not the intimidati­ng figure whose presence on a Sunday leaderboar­d prompted challenger­s to wilt as they heard the distant roar of galleries cheering Tiger's inevitable charge. After gaining the lead on Sunday, Woods carded a double bogey on the 11th and a bogey on the 12th.

“I had a great opportunit­y,” Woods told reporters afterward. “I know it's going to sting for a little bit here, but given where I was to where I am now, (I feel) blessed.”

The final round of the Open was entertaini­ng. It was a good mix of extraordin­ary shots and human foibles. It was fascinatin­g to see Molinari remain steady as chaos unfolded elsewhere. At one point six players were tied for the lead but Molinari was the only player in the field to post a bogey-free round.

Still, Woods was the reason most golf fans sat in front of my television for most of a sunny Sunday afternoon in July. After all these years, Tiger still has that effect.

New York — Mets minor leaguer Tim Tebow is set for hand surgery Tuesday, dashing his hopes of playing in the majors this year.

The 30-year-old outfielder will have surgery in New York to remove his broken right hamate bone, an injury that occurred Thursday while swinging a bat for Binghamton against Trenton in the Double-A Eastern League.

The former NFL quarterbac­k and Heisman Trophy winner was hitting .273 with six home runs and 36 RBIs in 84 games for Binghamton. He doubled in the Eastern League All-Star Game on July 11.

“It's about a six-to-eight week recovery, so effectivel­y his season is over,” Mets assistant general manager John Ricco said after Tebow was examined Monday at the Hospital for Special Surgery.

Tebow hit .301 in June for the Rumble Ponies and .340 in 15 games in July.

“I view this season as a complete positive,” Ricco said. “Obviously it ends disappoint­ingly. He's going to miss the last month, month-plus. But to see a guy who in a couple short years is now competing at the Double-A level and thriving, really — the last couple months he was playing really well, so I don't think how that could be anything but a positive.

“Obviously, the age factor is there, and it's tough for him to miss this last month. But I view this as nothing but a positive.”

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