The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Woods forced to take time off after missing the cut

- By Tom Morgan

A dejected Tiger Woods is planning to take another short break from golf after an intensive physiother­apy session to loosen up his back failed to save him from an early exit at Royal Portrush.

The 43-year-old has been playing through the pain all week and is understood to have had a 45-minute treatment on Thursday night after admitting he was particular­ly sore during his troubled sevenover-par in the opening round.

Yesterday, he was grimacing in pain again as he managed to get round in 70, leaving him six over and on the next plane home. “I’m going to take a couple of weeks off and get ready for the play-offs,” he said afterwards.

Woods denied his back problems were anything like as bad as they were prior to surgery, but the sport’s one true megastar suggested he was almost relieved that he would not be playing today. “It’s been a lot of travel, a lot of time in the air, a lot of moving around and different hotels and everything,” he said. “I just want to go home.”

Woods had sought advice from a Harley Street specialist at the time of his make-or-break spinal fusion surgery in April, 2017. He staged one of sport’s great comebacks to win the Masters in April this year, but the pained expression on his face throughout his time in Portrush is an ominous sign. Before his second round, Woods was forced to sit on the grass of the practice ground to do up his shoes.

He insisted, however, that the pain he has suffered this week was incomparab­le with the agony he was in two years ago. “You can’t compare the two,” he said. “Those were some of the lowest times of my life. This is not. This is just me not playing well and not scoring well, and it adds up to high scores.”

It is the seventh time in 13 majors since 2014 that Woods has missed the cut. Since the Masters he has flopped at the USPGA and tied for 21st at the US Open last month.

“I kind of grinded my way around the golf course today,” he said of his performanc­e. “I had a chance to get it back to even par for the tournament. I didn’t handle the par fives well. I was in perfect condition on all three of them. If I handled those par fives well I would be right there.”

Woods took a break in Thailand with his girlfriend and children last month, but said he now needs more time out. “I just want some time off just to get away from it,” he said.

He insisted there was no chance of him quitting, despite his apparently declining health. “I just have to continue doing what I’m doing. I’ve gotten so much stronger over the past year, working with my physios and trying to get my body organised so that I can play at a high level. It panned out; I won a major chip this year.

“It’s just a matter of being consistent. That’s one of the hardest things to accept as an older athlete is that you’re not going to be as consistent as you were at 23. Things are different. And I’m going to have my hot weeks. I’m going to be there in contention with a chance to win, and I will win tournament­s. But there are times when I’m just not going to be there.”

 ??  ?? Old problem: Tiger Woods struggled with his back again at Royal Portrush
Old problem: Tiger Woods struggled with his back again at Royal Portrush

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