Calgary Herald

HARD TO BELIEVE, BUT WOODS ONCE SEEMED SO INVINCIBLE

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com Twitter: @Scott_stinson

It was in 1996 that Earl Woods, father of Tiger, proclaimed haltingly and through tears that his son, then just 20 years old, “would bring to the world a humanitari­anism which has never been known before.” He also said the “world would be a better place to live in, by virtue of his existence.”

It was quite the agenda for someone embarking on a career as a profession­al golfer.

And while Tiger did not manage the messiah feat that Earl predicted, one could be forgiven for wondering, after the first decade of his career, if he didn't have a touch of immortalit­y about him after all.

He won on the PGA Tour as soon as he turned pro, and then crushed the field at Augusta National to win his first Masters at just 21. He won four straight major championsh­ips from 2000 to 2001 and over those two seasons he won 17 PGA Tour events. Phil Mickelson, one of his most accomplish­ed rivals, has never won more than four times in a season. Woods became the only player in history to win eight tournament­s in a year three times by his 2006 season. He was still just 30. He had already won 10 majors by that time, and it seemed he would cruise to at least another 10 to pass

Jack Nicklaus's record of 18. He did this while becoming one of the most famous people on the planet, an athlete who had more attention on him and interest in him than few others in history, owing in part to his accomplish­ments and in part to his ethnicity that had roots all over the globe. The biggest knock on him was that he was a little standoffis­h and was sometimes prone to cussing on the golf course.

No one had been hyped like Tiger Woods. And he had somehow lived up to it.

The road from immortal to alltoo-human proved to be brutally short. Woods's single-car rollover on Tuesday morning in California, which left the 45-year-old with serious leg injuries, was the latest reminder of this fact. He's a guy whose accomplish­ments on the golf course remain remarkable, but who was also just a middle-aged dad who lost control of his vehicle and was lucky to escape with his life.

There is always more to a superstar athlete than the public persona we're allowed to see.

But no one's shield of greatness has been dropped to expose everyday foibles as completely as Woods's. For all he did in that first decade on the golf course, culminatin­g with a U.S. Open win on a damaged leg in 2008, he has been relentless­ly human since. There was the infidelity scandal of 2009, in which an extremely private athlete had the details of his broken home life become public. That was when Woods held a televised news conference to issue a robotic apology and vow to be a better man. There were injury problems, and more injury problems, and in his prolonged absences a more complete picture began to emerge of someone whose freakish greatness had been achieved at the cost of something close to a normal life. Earl had set out to raise a golfing machine and on that score he had succeeded. But with his death in 2006, Woods was unmoored. He sought out intense Navy SEAL training in some kind of connection with his late military father, his marriage fell apart, his golf career would go through fits and spurts for years. Injury layoff, comeback, slow return to good form, injury layoff again. An impaired-driving charge, connected to painkiller­s he was taking after back surgery. Former members of his inner circle, of which there are legion, suggested that Woods had pushed his body so hard that he had effectivel­y sabotaged his own career, like a rubber band stretched to the breaking point. Approachin­g his 40th birthday, his back was so damaged that he fell over from the pain while practising in his Florida backyard. He said at the time that his career might be over. He had won 14 majors in 11 seasons, and did not win another in the following decade.

Woods did author one more comeback. When he finally won that 15th major, at the 2019 Masters, his vulnerabil­ity was there for all to see. He would say afterward he was just glad his kids had witnessed golf bringing him something other than pain. Woods had never been so relatable.

For a short moment on Tuesday night, with the images of his destroyed courtesy car, the fear was that his story would have an awful end. Instead, Woods is recovering. It will be some time before we know if he has one more comeback left in him.

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