The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim gears up for SA tour

- Takudzwa Chitsiga Sports Reporter

NEW YORK. — Some numbers illuminate glory.

Like 82, the benchmark for most PGA Tour victories that Tiger Woods tied this weekend.

Or 15, which places him second for most major championsh­ips. Or 683, his tally of weeks spent as world No. 1, more than twice that of his nearest competitor.

Even more compelling, at times, are the numbers that speak to guts.

Like the 1 876 barren days between wins 79 and 80, two peaks separated by a valley whose walls once seemed insurmount­able.

Or the 3 954 days that elapsed between his 14th major victory and his astonishin­g 15th earlier this year at Augusta National.

Or 1 199, the lowly, lonely position in the world ranking to which he had fallen less than two years ago.

Surviving all three threats that have destroyed lesser athletes — a broken body, a broken game, a broken private life — Tiger Woods has become sport’s most improbable symbol of longevity.

Two months shy of his 44th birthday, he is breaking performanc­e records while beating up on the kids who thought he was on the canvas a half-decade ago, and transforme­d the traditiona­lly ceremonial role of Presidents Cup captain into a combat position instead.

At Royal Melbourne in December, Woods will play for himself.

He always has.

What makes win No. 82 so remarkable isn’t the manner of the victory — we’ve long since become accustomed to seeing Woods cruise past a quality field as he did at the Zozo Championsh­ip in Japan — but the fact that few people genuinely expected to witness even wins 80 and 81.

It was August 2013 when he notched No. 79 at the Bridgeston­e Invitation­al.

Then came injuries, surgeries, personal travails, scorecards more worthy of a 10-handicap, a mug shot, A DUI plea, treatment, each episode brought an avalanche of career obituaries.

Even Woods himself wondered aloud if he was finished. “I don’t know what my future holds,” he said two years ago with an air of resignatio­n.

He probably didn’t know what Japan held either.

Woods hadn’t competed in nine weeks, was fresh off yet another procedure on his left knee, and ended last season with a run of desultory form after the Masters.

But as the Zozo wore on, more numbers made the win seem inevitable.

Seven times he had won his first start of the season, which the Zozo was, he had never lost after opening a tournament with consecutiv­e rounds of 64 or better.

When he gets his nose in front at the halfway stage, he’s like Seabiscuit, with a staggering 84.8% conversion rate.

Leading by three or more strokes after 54 holes, he was 24 for 24.

Really, who was going to stop him? For perspectiv­e on how much has changed since Woods’ first win 8,421 days ago, Fox News Channel didn’t even exist then, it debuted one day after he won in Las Vegas, a victory that elevated the rookie to 75th in the world ranking.

Of the world’s top 25 golfers that same week, Phil Mickelson stands alone in not yet having been consigned to the PGA Tour Champions or the TV booth.

Some are now retired even from the senior circuit.

“I’ve put myself up there with a chance to win on a number of occasions,” Woods said. “It’s been a long week. Five days at the top of the board is a long time.”

Twenty-three years at the top is a long time too.

The man Woods tied in the record books, Sam Snead, displayed tremendous longevity himself, his 82nd win came at age 52, or his 84th, if you listened to Sam.

Record-keeping was lax back then and a long-ago review had revised his total downward from 84, which he griped about for the remainder of his days.

When Snead died in May 2002, Woods had 31 PGA Tour victories, his most recent having come five weeks earlier at the Masters. The old legend died four days shy of his 90th birthday surely believing his record was safe.

His protestati­ons aside, even the 82 wins accorded Snead is generous -half-dozen were against fields of fewer than 15 players, some against fields so small that every competitor could have shared a ride to the course.

There were a few 36-holers, an 18-holer, a smattering of team events, this is a record that seemed ordained to one day belong to Woods.

He only gets four shots a year to edge closer to Jack Nicklaus’ gold standard in the Majors, which remains tantalisin­gly out of reach.

No athlete has re-invented himself more often than Woods, and few have clawed back from such depths — GolfWeek

THE Zimbabwe Under-14 national cricket side have stepped up their preparatio­ns for the annual Momentum Cricket Week scheduled for December 7-11 in Pretoria, South Africa.

Teams participat­ing in the age-group tournament, organised annually by Cricket South Africa, play declaratio­n 20-over and 50-over formats during the five-day event.

Zimbabwe Cricket have since selected a squad of 13 players picked during the selection trials in the capital two weeks ago.

The team will be under the guidance of David Mutendera and Denford Kumundati, who is the assistant coach and team manager.

A number of Chevrons, including Brendan Taylor, Kyle Jarvis, Chamu Chibhabha and Tarisai Musakanda, passed through the Momentum Cricket Week.

“This is a longstandi­ng relationsh­ip between CSA and ZC and the tournament has over the years brought through most of the players who have gone on to play for the senior national team,” Kumundati said.

ZIMBABWE UNDER- 14 TEAM Nicholas Anderson ( Mashonalan­d East), Dylan Nzvenga ( Tuskers), Sean Bennett (Mashonalan­d East), Nathaniel Hlabangana ( Tuskers), Liam Mudenda ( Tuskers), Rufaro Zhanda (Mashonalan­d East), Ben Williams ( Tuskers), Brandon Sunguro (Eagles), Isaac Phiri ( Tuskers), Taona Zimhunga (Eagles), Carlton Takwira (Eagles), Shane Muchenje (Rhinos), Sean Dzakatira ( Tuskers).

Non-Travelling Reserves: Newman Nyamhuri (Rhinos), Mutsawashe Choto (Eagles), Tyde Stirrup (Eagles), Lwandile Chitofu ( Tuskers).

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