Tiger Woods claims a 'victory' at the Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Tiger Woods has now started 358 tournaments on the PGA Tour and until this one — his most improbable one, the 2022 Masters — his definition of winning was simple: sit atop the leaderboard at the end of competition.
Woods’ferocious competitive instincts and obsession to win, perhaps bordering on unhealthy, have driven him across his career. There were no second places, no top-five finishes. There is victory. There is failure.
Then came Thursday here at Augusta National which Woods entered 408 days after a car accident nearly cost him part of his right leg and 509 days since his last truly competitive round. Against long odds and at the end of an even longer rehabilitation and medical journey, Tiger Woods walked out to the first tee, stared up at a huge hill and some 10,000 fans staring* back at him, and got to work.
About four hours later he saved par on No. 18 to a massive ovation. He had not only completed the round, he was sitting at a 1-under 71, eventually just four shots behind the leader, Sungjae Im.
Ten months ago, when Woods couldn’t get out of a hospital bed installed in his house, this seemed impossible. As recently as two weeks ago, when rumors of him playing easy rounds down in Florida emerged, this seemed unlikely.
Yet here it was, Tiger Woods not just back, not just likely to make the cut at a major championship, but right there at the edge of the l eader boar d.
So Woods was asked: Is this a win?
“Yes,” he said, and it was an acknowledgement of truth, a victory of perspective over his traditional bravado.
Tiger’s desire to win a sixth green jacket is not lessened by admitting that this, this incredible comeback, was a victory unto itself.
“If you would have seen how my leg looked to where it's at now,” Woods said. “... To see where I've been, to see — to get from there to here. It was no easy task.”
Tiger was really good Thursday. He played a steady game amid changing conditions, still damp early, more windy late. Where others fell off, he stayed strong — birdies on Nos. 6, 13 and 16; bogeys on 8 and 14. He didn’t fade as his reconstructed right leg grew tired of climbing those Georgia hills.
“It did not get easier, let's put it that way,” Woods said. “I can swing a golf club. The walking is not easy. It's difficult. As I said with all the hard work, my leg, it's going to be difficult for the rest of my life. That's just the way it is, but I'm able to do it.”