Daily Mail

$1 BILLION CHANGE OF FORTUNE

Just two years ago, it seemed unthinkabl­e, after a police arrest and sleazy affairs left him a toxic brand. Now sponsors are ALREADY cashing in on golf’s greatest comeback. Cynical opportunis­m — or rightful rewards of redemption?

- from Tom Leonard

Within six minutes of his winning putt at the U.S. Masters, the sports clothing giant nike had put out an advert celebratin­g tiger Woods.

the chant of ‘tiger! tiger!’ from fans lining the green in Augusta, Georgia, was soon drowned out by the ringing of cash tills as delighted sponsors and golf industry bosses gleefully totted up their future earnings.

the pedestrian world of profession­al golf was once more ‘the tiger Woods Show’ — far more exciting to advertiser­s, audiences and potential players. Woods, who became the world’s first billion- dollar sportsman in 2009, made a fortune for himself and so many others.

nike — which has sponsored Woods for 23 years — was estimated to have earned $22.5 million (£17.2 million) simply from its associatio­n with his victory on Sunday.

its ‘swoosh’ logo was plastered not only over Woods — on his hat, shirt, trousers and shoes — but over his son, Charlie, who was dutifully wearing a nike t-shirt and cap.

Charlie, ten, was beside the green with his sister Sam, 11, and grandmothe­r Kultida, plus the golfer’s girlfriend Erica herman, to hug Woods as the cameras swarmed around.

Amid the euphoria, it was seemingly forgotten that the last time Woods draped himself in his family, portraying himself as a devoted young dad and husband a decade ago, it turned out to be a gigantic fraud.

his personal life and career imploded in 2009 after it emerged that he had been cheating on his beautiful Swedish wife Elin nordegren, the mother of his children, with a tawdry army of strippers, porn stars and nightclub hostesses.

the man hailed by some as the greatest athlete of the modern era sank as spectacula­rly as he had risen, his failings compounded by a later arrest for ‘driving under the influence’. Until Sunday, he hadn’t had a major victory since 2008.

Last year, a searing and exhaustive­ly researched biography twisted the knife, painting Woods as one of the most odious men in sporting history — an entitled, arrogant egotist who treated almost everyone like dirt.

BUT Americans love a winner — particular­ly one who pulls off as spectacula­r a comeback as Woods. And the U. S. media did its best to accentuate the positive about him, breathless­ly talking up the 43-year-old’s chances of beating Jack nicklaus’s record 18 major competitio­n victories and the incredible power of ‘redemption’.

his ugly past, if mentioned at all, was coyly skated over as ‘personal woes’ and ‘a painful period of his life’ for the ‘prodigal son’. nike couldn’t have put the forgiving mood better than it did in a particular­ly cynical marketing slogan it dreamt up for Woods in an earlier comeback attempt — ‘Winning takes Care of Everything’. it does seem to have done that — supporters believe that if he continues to play like this, he could make another billion dollars.

Yet the rekindled love affair with Woods isn’t entirely altruistic. Much of the golf world has been rooting for a comeback. Although he’s balding now under that nike cap, as a young, attractive and mesmerisin­g player, he singlehand­edly transforme­d the sport’s unathletic image and boosted its fortunes.

When Woods is on the leaderboar­d, interest in golf, attendance at tournament­s and television viewing figures rocket.

nike set a new record for sporting sponsorshi­p when it gave Woods a five-year, $105 million contract in 2000. Sticking by him as other sponsors pulled out, it signed a new deal in 2013 for $200 million.

the U. S. company has an inglorious track record for standing by disgraced sportsmen, including the U.S. sprinter Justin Gatlin who was caught using illegal performanc­e- enhancing drugs, and an American football star who was found to be running a dog-fighting ring.

nike was being congratula­ted in the sports and marketing worlds yesterday.

the company’s latest advert, a montage of old footage of the golfing boy wonder playing as a child and an adult, claims: ‘it’s crazy to think a 43-year-old who has experience­d every high and every low and has just won his 15th major is chasing the same dream as a three-year-old.’ Some might say it’s one thing to acknowledg­e a remarkable sporting return to form, quite another to hold up Woods as a hero.

Much has changed in his life but Woods doesn’t appear to have gained a great deal more humility. he revealed that after his latest victory he told his children he hoped they were proud of how he fought. And he certainly sounded his old smug self when he put on the victor’s green jacket for a fifth time and remarked: ‘it fits.’

there was a time when it looked as if the last golf club associated with Woods would be the one wielded by his furious wife when she was chasing his car one night in 2009. As she smashed the vehicle outside their Florida home, he lost control behind the wheel and crashed into a tree. Woods was later seen lying on his back on the ground, shoeless and unconsciou­s from an anti-insomnia sedative.

THE previous night Ms nordegren had looked through his mobile phone messages and found he had been lying when he publicly refuted claims that he’d had an affair with new York nightclub hostess Rachel Uchitel. it emerged that she was just one of at least 15 women (estimates of the total rose as high as 120) with whom he had cheated on his wife.

Several of them said the golfer, who suffered from insomnia, would stay up all night having sex. A new York madam claimed Woods had repeatedly used her services, sometimes hiring prostitute­s two at a time and once paying $15,000 (£11,400) for a call girl.

his marriage collapsed and, as he was plagued by back injuries, so did his golf. however, his many friends and admirers in the sport never lost hope that he would recover his form and rehabilita­te his reputation.

it was not a foregone conculsion. in 2017, Woods took another knock when police found him asleep at the wheel of his £180,000 Mercedes outside his Florida home at 2am one night. he told them he thought he was in California.

Woods blithely dismissed his humiliatin­g state as ‘an unexpected reaction to prescribed medication­s’ but it emerged that two of the five drugs in his system were banned by golf’s governing body, the PGA tour. he admitted a charge of reckless driving but escaped a more serious one of driving under the influence.

By 2018, his golf performanc­es had improved and large crowds once more turned out to watch him play. however, once again he suffered a reversal. A biography, tiger Woods, argued that he was an even worse human being than anyone had assumed.

Written by Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian, and based on 250 interviews, the book portrayed Woods as a sociopathi­c narcissist with no time for even the most basic human civilities such as a ‘hello’ or ‘thank you’.

the authors suggested that Woods’s controllin­g, dysfunctio­nal parents deserved much of the blame. his domineerin­g father, Earl Woods, has been credited with instilling in him the ruthless drive to win at golf — and the new nike advert shows father and son embracing after Woods’s first big

competitio­n win. But the book revealed woods sr to be a compulsive womaniser who in later life kept a squad of young female staff in his house to satisfy his sexual needs and had pornograph­y showing continuall­y on his TV.

woods, the lonely only child of an African-American father and a Thai mother, was painfully insecure away from golf and developed a stutter, said the authors. success only accentuate­d his shortcomin­gs, they added.

even while he was wooing Ms Nordegren, a nanny to another player’s children, woods was playing the field on lavish Las Vegas jaunts. He particular­ly liked a debauched nightclub where VIPs could pick out attractive women and have them brought to their table.

Marriage changed nothing and he continued to trawl the seamier nightclubs of Vegas, New York and Orlando for young conquests. woods claimed the book was ‘littered with egregious errors’.

There was never any reconcilia­tion with his spurned wife, who left him with an estimated £76 million settlement. woods had sex addiction therapy, followed by a succession of girlfriend­s. He met the latest, erica Herman, 35, in september 2017. The former manager of a golf-themed restaurant he owned has been his loyal supporter in public.

The jury is still out on whether woods has changed as a human being. Critics say he never sent condolence­s to the family of Glenn Frey, the eagles singer and a close friend, when he died in 2016, nor did he get in touch with exgirlfrie­nd Lindsey Vonn when she suffered a terrible training injury.

His fans insist woods is now a genuinely devoted dad. even if they are right, it’s clear that in the sports world, personal failings count for little when set against success and money.

 ??  ?? POLICE MUGSHOT 2017
POLICE MUGSHOT 2017
 ??  ?? Affair: Hostess Rachel Uchitel
Affair: Hostess Rachel Uchitel
 ??  ?? Tiger feat: Woods and son Charlie, in matching Nike gear, celebrate his astonishin­g Masters win. Below, with girlfriend Erica Herman last year
Tiger feat: Woods and son Charlie, in matching Nike gear, celebrate his astonishin­g Masters win. Below, with girlfriend Erica Herman last year
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