New York Post

Cannizzaro’s picks LIE OF THE TIGER

Woods fooling himself if he thinks he can win one more green jacket

- Mark Cannizzaro mcannizzar­o@nypost.com

Xander Schauffele: He’s won seven times on the PGA Tour and is seeking his first major. He’s finished in the top 10 in majors 11 times, and seven of those have been in the top six, six in the top five. He’s ready and in a good head space. This week is his time.

Scottie Scheffler: It’s difficult to pick against him considerin­g he won the 2022 Masters and enters this week as the No. 1 ranked player and he’s won two of his past three starts with the one non-win a runner-up. He looks almost infallible as the leader in almost every ball-striking statistic on the PGA Tour. Brooks Koepka: You cannot ignore Koepka as the sport’s top big-game hunter when it comes to majors. He finished runner-up last year, his second runner-up at the Masters. He’s already bagged two U.S. Opens and two PGA Championsh­ips. Maybe this is his time at Augusta.

Jon Rahm: The defending champion comes to Augusta as a member of LIV Golf and will have a chip on his shoulder for the criticism he’s gotten for making the jump for the money. Will Zalatoris: He was runnerup at the 2021 Masters, and after a year of back surgery and rehab, he entered the week with solid results — T13, T2 and T4 earlier in the year. He played with Tiger Woods on Monday and picked his brain.

Ludvig Aberg: Sure, this is his first Masters and no first-timer has won since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979. But this 24-year-old Swede is good. He led the Valero field in Strokes gained: tee-to-green last week and has performed well in pressure situations, as evidenced by his Ryder Cup debut last fall.

AUGUSTA, Ga. — He still thinks he can win. Believe him — or bet on him — at your own peril.

Tiger Woods, at age 48 and with more physical ailments than major championsh­ips on his stunning résumé, is playing in his 26th Masters this week at Augusta National — and Tuesday said he still believes he has it in him to win a record-tying sixth green jacket.

“If everything comes together,” said Woods, who has 15 major titles to his credit,

“I think I can get one more.’’

Then, he added this with a smile:

“Do I need to describe that any more than that, or are we good?”

This remains Woods’ preferred reality: He’s stuck in the phase where he’s talking himself into the belief he can still win major championsh­ips.

This is the actual reality: Though he has no interest in entertaini­ng the thought — at least publicly — Woods is well into the phase of ceremonial golfer, even if he doesn’t know it yet.

The fact is Woods is in the early stages of what Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus eventually became at every Masters — an all-time great who golf fans would feel privileged to watch still play.

Woods, whose world ranking has plummeted to 959th, has played in only one tournament this year, and he failed to make it through two rounds — withdrawin­g from the second round of the Genesis Invitation­al in February with the flu.

The last PGA Tour event in which Woods played all four rounds was the 2023 Genesis Invitation­al. The only other full-field event he played in 2023 was the Masters, at which he had to withdraw after two rounds with physical ailments.

For Woods, the challenge of the week is more about the walk around hilly Augusta than the golf shots.

“I hurt every day,’’ Woods said. “I ache every day.’’

His ankle, injured in the 2021 car crash, is fused, but, he said, “It’s other parts of my body that now have to take the brunt of it. It’s certainly one of the more hillier walks that we have. It is a long walk.’’

In December at his tournament, the Hero World Challenge, Woods stated his goal is to play one event a month. So, it was presumed after the Genesis that he’d play either the Players Championsh­ip or the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al in March in preparatio­n for this week’s Masters.

Woods, however, played in neither.

“I wasn’t ready to play,” Woods said. “My body wasn’t ready. My game wasn’t ready. I thought that when I was at Hero, once a month would be a really nice rhythm. Hasn’t worked out that way. But now we have major championsh­ips every month from here through July, so now the once a month hopefully kicks in.”

It’s pure folly and fantasy to think Woods can still contend at his age and physical condition while going up against the likes of Scottie Scheffler, Jon Rahm, Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka.

Woods is in pursuit of two significan­t Masters records this week. If he makes the cut, it’ll be the 24th consecutiv­e time he’s done that, which would break the record held by his good friend Fred Couples and Bernhard Langer.

A win would tie Nicklaus for the most in Masters history at six. Woods won his fifth Masters in 2019, which feels like an eternity ago considerin­g what he’s dealt with physically off the golf course in that five-year span, the worst of which was the near-fatal car crash in February 2021.

Nicklaus, for years, swore he’d never become a ceremonial golfer, which is exactly what he became at Augusta after he was past his ability to compete to win.

Referencin­g Nicklaus’ one-time reticence, I asked Woods on Tuesday whether he’s had thoughts about his mortality as a competitor, eventually morphing into a ceremonial golfer and even taking part as one of the honorary starters for the annual ceremonial first tee shot.

“No, no,” he said. “I have not thought about being an [honorary] starter here, no.”

Then I asked if, in a more immediate sense, what’ll happen when he doesn’t think everything can “come together” and result in victory, he said, “Well, I still think they can. I don’t know when that day is or when that day comes, but … I haven’t got to that point where I don’t think I can’t.”

Miracles can happen — some felt 2019 fell into that category — but Woods is now surely there, needing a miracle to contend.

Even if he refuses to believe it in his mind. Even if some of his close friends — like Couples, with whom he played the back nine on Tuesday morning — refuse to acknowledg­e it.

“Can he win here? You know what? Yeah,” Couples said.

Couples said that sounding almost hopeful.

Who isn’t hopeful?

What more remarkable story is there this week than Woods winning a sixth green jacket against all odds and reason?

 ?? Getty Images ?? ONE MORE, UM, RUN: Tiger Woods walks toward the eighth fairway during his practice round Tuesday. Woods, who has barely played competitiv­e golf over the past year, says he still believes he can win another green jacket if everything comes together.
Getty Images ONE MORE, UM, RUN: Tiger Woods walks toward the eighth fairway during his practice round Tuesday. Woods, who has barely played competitiv­e golf over the past year, says he still believes he can win another green jacket if everything comes together.
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