The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Woods no long feeling pain in the neck at Players

- By Doug Ferguson AP Golf Writer

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLA. (AP) >> Tiger Woods no longer has a pain in the neck.

The trick going forward for Woods is to make sure the soreness that caused him to withdraw from the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al doesn’t keep him from missing more tournament­s the rest of his injury-filled career.

“I’m 43 with four back surgeries so must manage what I have and understand that I’m going to have good weeks and bad weeks and try and manage as best I possibly can and not push it,” Woods said Tuesday after a nine-hole practice round at The Players Championsh­ip.

“There are times when over the years I pushed it, pushed through a few things, and I’ve won a few tournament­s doing it that way,” he said. “But also, I’ve cost myself a few years here and there because of it.”

Woods chose not to push it last week by skipping Bay Hill, where he has won eight times.

He had fusion surgery on his lower spine in April 2017 — his fourth surgery on his back in four years — and it allowed him to return to a level that saw him win last year at the Tour Championsh­ip, play in another Ryder Cup and return to the top 15 in the world ranking.

Woods said his neck first bothered him last summer at the British Open, where he was seen

wearing kinesiolog­y tape, and at times during a big stretch of tournament­s during the FedEx Cup playoffs.

It flared up again at the Genesis Open last month, and then got worse in Mexico City the following week.

“It was getting to the point where it was affecting my setup, my backswing, my through swing,” Woods said. “It was just gradually getting worse. That’s just because my lower back is fused, and so the stress has to go somewhere if I don’t have movement, and so it’s very important for me going forward since the surgery to keep pliable or else the stress is going to go somewhere else.”

 ?? MARCO UGARTE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this Feb. 22, 2019, file photo, Tiger Woods prepares to catch a ball tossed by his caddied on the second day of competitio­n of the WGC-Mexico Championsh­ip golf tournament at the Chapultepe­c Golf Club in Mexico City.
MARCO UGARTE - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this Feb. 22, 2019, file photo, Tiger Woods prepares to catch a ball tossed by his caddied on the second day of competitio­n of the WGC-Mexico Championsh­ip golf tournament at the Chapultepe­c Golf Club in Mexico City.

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