Yuma Sun

Woods returns to golf with the same belief he can win

- BY DOUG FERGUSON ap GOLF Writer

LOS ANGELES – Tiger Woods feels good enough to play at Riviera, his first tournament with a cut and without a cart since the British Open last July. He already is looking ahead to the Masters. And yes, he thinks he can win.

“I would not have put myself out here if I didn’t think I could beat these guys,” Woods said Tuesday ahead of the Genesis Invitation­al, which has attracted 19 of the top 20 players in the world.

He also is well aware that he has not won since Octo- ber 2019, and that at age 47 and with more surgeries than major titles (15), time is running out. He knows that. He’s just not quite ready to accept it.

Golf is not a contact sport, but it has become a young man’s game. Only two of the top 10 players in golf are in their 30s. The oldest is Rory Mcilroy at 33.

Woods can play. The question is whether he can compete, whether he can win. He remains at 82 career PGA Tour titles, a record he shares with Sam Snead, who was 67 when he made the cut at a PGA Championsh­ip.

Part of Woods was annoyed that he was celebrated for making the cut in the Masters last year, his first competitio­n since a February 2021 car crash outside Los Angeles shattered bones in his right leg and ankle.

“I’m there to get a W, OK? So I don’t understand that making the cut is a great thing,” Woods said. “If I entered the event, it’s always to get a W. There will come a point in time when my body will not allow me to do that anymore, and it’s probably sooner rather than later. But wrapping my ahead around that transition and being the

ambassador role and just trying to be out here with the guys, no, that’s not in my DNA.”

He played that ambassador role last year at the Genesis Invitation­al as the tournament host. He also is leading the private player meetings geared toward building a new PGA Tour model of elite tournament­s as a response to Saudi-funded LIV Golf.

His announceme­nt Friday that he was playing led to a scramble for media credential­s. The back of the press room in the Riviera clubhouse was lined with some two dozen photograph­ers waiting for him to show up for his news conference.

Woods had planned to play in his Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas the first week of December, but in accelerati­ng his practice he developed plantar fasciitis that kept him from walking. He said he still copes with plantar fasciitis, only it has become manageable. The ankle is what gives him problems.

He prepared for Riviera – and the Masters, and whatever else can follow – with a

more graduated practice of hitting golf balls, walking the course until he became tired, and then walking a little more until he could get in 18 holes.

What to expect? Not even Woods knows.

Woods no longer is motivated by naysayers, a product of age and maturity, with a dose of reality. He knows his last win was the Zozo Championsh­ip in Japan in 2019, which was six months after he won the Masters.

Before his back fusion surgery in 2017, when it was a struggle just to walk, Woods had reason to wonder if he would ever play. He thinks he can beat Mcilroy and Scottie Scheffler, the new No. 1 in golf. But there is more gratitude about simply playing.

As for the rest of the year, Woods only knows it will be a limited schedule of the majors and maybe a few more. That’s a good forecast. He was at Los Angeles Country Club on Monday riding around in a cart to look at the North course ahead of the U.S. Open.

The end is sooner rather than later, but it’s not now.

 ?? RYAN KANG/AP ?? TIGER WOODS hits out of a greenside bunker on the 17th hole during the final round of the Genesis Invitation­al at Riviera Country Club, Sunday, Feb. 16, 2020, in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles.
RYAN KANG/AP TIGER WOODS hits out of a greenside bunker on the 17th hole during the final round of the Genesis Invitation­al at Riviera Country Club, Sunday, Feb. 16, 2020, in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles.

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