The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Expert speaks on Woods injury

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FLORIDA. — Tiger Woods’ withdrawal from last week’s Dubai Desert Classic golf tournament due to back spasms has cast a lengthenin­g shadow over his return to competitio­n, leaving at least one expert to conclude his brilliant career is now drawing to a premature close.

While manager Mark Steinberg downplayed the withdrawal, saying Woods had a “back spasm”, sports injury expert Selene Parekh says the player “should be very concerned” that he had to make an early departure from the Middle East event.

Comfortabl­y the greatest player of his generation and arguably the best of all time, Woods was a creaking shadow of his former self in Dubai, struggling to a five-over 77 in the opening round before pulling out of the tournament the following day.

The Dubai event had been inked in as the second of four he was scheduled to play in a five-week span as part of his proposed build-up to the first major of the year, the April 6-9 Masters, but those plans are now very much up in the air.

Woods has played just three tournament­s since returning to competitio­n in December after an absence of nearly 16 months, finishing 15th out of 18 at the Hero World Challenge, missing the cut at the Farmers Insurance Open and exiting Dubai after just one round.

Though Woods mixed flashes of the brilliance for which he was once renowned with some rusty and often erratic play at the Hero event in the Bahamas, the brightest sign there was that he appeared healthy.

In Dubai, however, Woods looked stiff and all too often his gait and revamped swing were slow and ungainly.

Golf Channel analyst and former PGA Tour player Brandel Chamblee said he looked like “the oldest 41-year-old man in the history of the game”. For a man who endured two back surgeries in late 2015 before taking an extended break from the game to recover, these most recent developmen­ts are far from promising.

“It’s not the nerve pain that has kept him out for so long, it’s a back spasm,” Woods’ manager Mark Steinberg said after the 14-times major champion withdrew from Dubai.

“The fact that he feels that it’s not the nerve pain, that’s very encouragin­g for him. He’s had spasms before.”

Sports injury expert Parekh, a professor of surgery in the Division of Orthopaedi­c Surgery at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, has a contrastin­g view of a player now ranked 674th in the world.

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