The New Zealand Herald

Woods needs a leg up and takes big swing at the Shark

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Tiger Woods painted an uncertain picture about how much golf he can play, saying “I don’t have much left in this leg.”

He also doesn’t have much hope the PGA Tour and the Saudi-funded rival league can get along unless Greg Norman is out as LIV Golf’s leader.

“Not right now. Not with their leadership. Not with Greg there and his animosity towards the tour itself,” Woods said. “I don’t see that happening.”

Woods skirted around other questions yesterday, such as details on two unexpected surgeries he had last year and whether the 20-man field at the Hero World Challenge should be getting points towards the world rankings.

He was forceful on the effect of LIV Golf, referring to friction the rival league has caused and how lawsuits stand in the way of any reconcilia­tion.

“If one side has so much animosity — someone trying to destroy our tour — then how do we work with that?”

Phil Mickelson was among 10 players who filed an anti-trust lawsuit against the PGA Tour in August, a lawsuit since taken over by LIV Golf. Bryson DeChambeau, Peter Uihlein and Matt Jones are the only players still involved as plaintiffs. The PGA Tour since has filed a countersui­t. A trial date is tentativel­y scheduled for January 2024.

Woods said the lawsuits would have to be settled — he used the word “stay” more than once — or there is no way forward.

Woods is at Albany Golf Club strictly as the tournament host. He had to withdraw on Tuesday because of plantar fasciitis in his right foot that makes it too difficult to walk over 72 holes, even on a relatively flat course for a holiday event.

Woods said he was posting low scores at home in Florida while riding in a cart. And his next two events — a made-for-TV match over 12 holes on December 11, and the PNC Championsh­ip with his son the following weekend — allow for carts.

“I can hit the golf ball and hit whatever shot you want,” he said. “I just can’t walk.”

He said the plantar fasciitis was related to injuries he suffered in the Los Angeles car crash in February 2021, which ended any hope of him playing on a regular basis. A year ago, Woods was starting to take full swings with the driver and his ambition was to make it to St Andrews for the 150th edition of the British Open. He wound up playing the Masters and the PGA Championsh­ip, too.

That amounted to nine rounds — four at Augusta National, three at the PGA Championsh­ip (he withdrew after the third round) and two at St Andrews.

Woods felt he was making progress in the months after the British Open, only to hurt his right foot while trying to prepare for a 72-hole event in the Bahamas.

“When you get plantar fasciitis, the worst thing you can do is walk, and I was walking more and more, trying to get my legs ready for this event, and I just kept making it worse,” he said. “So had to shut it down.”

Woods said he would take a month or two to rest, which won’t affect his golf schedule because he wasn’t going to play that much, anyway.

This has been coming. Woods turns 47 on December 30, and he has had roughly as many surgeries as majors he was won (15).

“The goal is to play just the major championsh­ips and maybe one or two more. That’s it. Physically, that’s all I can do,” he said.

“I don’t have much left in this leg, so gear up for the biggest ones and hopefully, lightning catches in a bottle and I’m up there in contention with a chance to win, and hopefully, I remember how to do that.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? A pensive Tiger Woods is concerned about his chances of playing major events without being able to walk.
Photo / Getty Images A pensive Tiger Woods is concerned about his chances of playing major events without being able to walk.

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