Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Woods isn’t concerned about game, criticisms

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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Tiger Woods is about the only person not in a panic about his game.

These remain curious times for the guy trying to show he can still dominate golf as he once did. In his past four tournament­s, Woods walked off the course in the middle of the final round at Doral with tightness in his left Achilles tendon, won by five shots at Bay Hill for his first PGA Tour title in 30 months, was an also-ran at the Masters with his worst performanc­e as a pro and missed the cut at Quail Hollow for only the eighth time in his career.

In the absence of trophies, there is no shortage of opinions.

Peter Alliss, the playerturn­ed-broadcaste­r, said before his induction into the World Golf Hall of Fame that Woods is “gone at the moment.” Nick Faldo, a six-time major champion who works for CBS Sports and Golf Channel, said Woods no longer has the self-belief that made him No. 1 for all those years. Brandel Chamblee, a journeyman on the PGA Tour and now an analyst for Golf Channel, said Woods should fire Sean Foley and call his old coach, Butch Harmon.

“And I know he’ll never do that because he’s letting his ego get in the way of common sense,” Chamblee said on a conference call for The Players Championsh­ip, which starts Thursday. “He wants to prove to people he’s right. He would rather prove to people he’s right than be right.”

Woods shot back with subtlety at the TV analysts.

“I can understand that everyone has an opinion, and he’s entitled to his. But he’s no longer playing anymore, so, so be it,” Woods said of Chamblee, who won once in 380 starts in his PGA Tour career.

As for Faldo’s comments on his self-belief?

“I always find it interestin­g since they’re not in my head,” Woods said. “They must have some kind of superpower I don’t know about.”

If he is looking for good vibes to turn his fortunes, the TPC Sawgrass might not be the best place.

No other course on his regular schedule has given him more fits. Sure, Woods won in 2001 with that “better than most” 60-foot birdie putt on the island-green 17th in the third round, and he was runner-up to Hal Sutton’s “Be the right club today!” moment in 2000. But he has had only two other finishes in the top 10 at The Players Championsh­ip, and the past two years were particular­ly troubling.

In 2010, returning to the scene where he made his first public appearance since the scandal in his personal life, he withdrew halfway through the final round with what turned out to be a minor neck injury. Last year, he withdrew after nine holes and a 42 on his card with injuries to his left leg, which kept him out of golf for the next three months and prolonged his “process” in the new swing Foley is teaching.

“I had a few issues going on physically there,” Woods said of last year. “I was wondering whether I should have played, and because this is a big event, I tried to tee it up and it didn’t work out. But it’s nice to actually be healthy again and do all my training and everything I need to do to get ready to play. That’s something that I could not do at the time.”

He had a little extra time to work on his game after missing the cut at Quail Hollow by one shot.

Woods tried to explain why his game can be up-anddown by saying that his new move is still uncomforta­ble, and that when he feels comfortabl­e over the ball, it often results in old swing patterns.

He said this was nothing new, either.

Woods said it took nearly two years for the overhaul with Harmon to feel natural, and about the same time with an entirely new swing from Hank Haney. He began working with Foley at the 2010 PGA Championsh­ip, though he missed nearly four months last year without competitio­n, and it wasn’t until a year after he hired Foley that Woods was able to practice and work out with no restrictio­ns.

Even so, he never missed a cut during the heart of the other two swing changes, and he still finished in the top 10 more often than he didn’t.

He is older this time around, having turned 36 during the offseason. He has gone through four knee surgeries. Whether the competitio­n is stronger is difficult to measure, though Alliss on Monday said during his best years, Woods was “Gulliver in a land of Lilliputia­ns.”

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