Calgary Herald

Shutdown may benefit Woods by allowing him to heal

Aging superstar emerged from lockdown with a rested back and great-looking swing

- JON MCCARTHY

When you’re 44 years old and in a tight match against Father Time, having the sports world shut down for months and months would seem like a very bad break. Not for Tiger Woods.

Assuming profession­al golf is able to reopen for business next month, no player should be as optimistic as the 15-time major winner.

The last time we saw Woods in a tournament was at the Genesis Open at Riviera where he came in last out of players to make the cut and looked bothered by his back.

He then skipped the WGC Mexico Championsh­ip, the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al and the tour’s flagship event, the Players Championsh­ip. The storyline was going to be: Will Tiger be ready for the Masters?

Then COVID-19 shut the world down. The circumstan­ces could hardly have been worse, but it gave Woods time to rest his back and re-emerge at last week’s charity match with a swing that looked great and a body that looked strong.

On top of that, Tiger has more experience than anyone coming back after a prolonged layoff. Overcoming four knee surgeries and four back surgeries, he has a long history of spending months off the course before re-emerging ready to compete. For most of the top players in the game, this was the longest break they have had from competitiv­e golf since they were a child. We’ve seen more photos of Rory Mcilroy on the Peloton than on the golf course recently.

It hasn’t been easy for anyone to stay focused on their goals in 2020, but if you had to bet on anyone keeping their mind ready to compete, who would it be? If Tiger is healthy, don’t be surprised if the 2019 Masters wasn’t his Last Dance.

STILL TALKIN’ THE MATCH

Who would have thought a four man charity match would be such a tough act to follow?

With the PGA Tour less than two weeks away from its June 11-14 restart at the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial in Texas, the golf world is still talking about last weekend’s wildly successful match that saw Tiger Woods and Peyton Manning hold off Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady while raising $20 million for COVID-19 relief.

The entire broadcast — assuming you could find it on Canadian television — was a beautiful mess. The rain was pouring, the players wore microphone­s, golf cart cams, trash talking, wise cracks from “analysts” Charles Barkley and Justin Thomas, and at the top was the unlikelies­t hole-out birdie from Tom Brady that might just be the greatest comeback of his career.

For years, PGA Tour broadcasts have been fighting criticism that they’ve become stale and haven’t kept up with what viewers want. And COVID-19 taking the fans off the golf course certainly isn’t going to help.

With social media allowing golfers to show more personalit­y to fans, the tour has to figure out how to translate that to the broadcast and its other media, something the European Tour has done better.

Barkley’s answer for at least these first four PGA Tour events without fans is to steal a page from The Match.

“If you’re not going to have fans, you can’t just have guys playing golf and announcers talking,” Barkley said this week on the Dan Patrick Show. “They’re going to have great ratings because we need golf, we need sports — I think they should consider (putting microphone­s on) the players.”

Mickelson was also on the Dan Patrick Show. He said he would be up for wearing a microphone in tour events. That’s no great surprise, considerin­g he’s as entertaini­ng as athletes come and probably hasn’t stopped talking since the match ended.

The problem is there’s only one Mickelson and players won’t be nearly as entertaini­ng when bearing down in tournament play.

But perhaps the fun that was had during The Match, mixed with the strange times we’re living in, will be the catalyst for change that golf broadcasts need.

CHIP SHOTS

Where will Tiger tee it up? The first two events are at Colonial in Texas, and Harbour Town in South Carolina. He’s played in each event just once and both were more than 20 years ago.

The Travelers Championsh­ip is next and will have a star-studded field, but Woods has never played the tournament. There is no obvious tour stop for Woods to play before The Memorial, but that’s not until mid-july.

Would he really take another nearly two month break after playing in last week’s one-day event? Doubtful, but if all goes according to plan. it will be a busy end to the summer for him.

The golf world will be waiting on his decision.

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 ?? MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES/FILES ?? After four knee surgeries and four operations on his back, Tiger Woods has plenty of experience coming back to the Pro Tour after a prolonged layoff.
MIKE EHRMANN/GETTY IMAGES/FILES After four knee surgeries and four operations on his back, Tiger Woods has plenty of experience coming back to the Pro Tour after a prolonged layoff.
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