At
one point during his horrendous
first round at the U.S. Open on Thursday, Tiger Woods
found himself on the side of a steep hill with his tee ball—which he had carved
at least fifty yards offline—sitting in deep fescue grass, about a foot below
his feet. He crouched down, head forward, looking more like a sumo wrestler
than the winner of fourteen major championships, and took a mighty whack. The
ball took off at a strange angle and landed in some more tall stuff on the
other side of the fairway. As Tiger followed through, the club, a short
iron, came out of his hands and flew over his left shoulder, ending up about
twenty or third yards behind him.
As this bizarre scene was unfolding, the two commentators
on Fox, which is broadcasting the U.S. Open for the
first time, remained silent for a moment. They happened to be two of the best
ball strikers in the history of the game: Greg Norman and Tom Weiskopf. Then
Norman said, “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a guy release a club like that in
all my years of play, Tom.” Weiskopf, who suffered a harrowing slump of his own
after looking like a world beater for a couple of years in the early
nineteen-seventies, gathered his thoughts. When you are playing really well, he
said, like Tiger did for most of his career, you can’t even imagine playing
badly. And when you are playing badly, you can’t even remember what it felt
like to play well. “It’s tough to watch,” Weiskopf added.
In a
sense, that’s true, but Tiger’s abject collapse, which began well before this
week, is also compelling viewing. As with a wreck you pass on a highway, it’s
hard to avoid sneaking a peek. And in this case, since it’s only a game, and
nobody except Tiger is really suffering, and he’s a multi-multi millionaire,
there’s no reason not to pull over and get a closer look. Especially when, on
the East Coast, it’s also being shown live, in prime time—a first for major
championships.
For
those of you who aren’t golf fans and wonder what the fuss is about, a few
comparisons might help. It is as if Itzhak Perlman was having trouble with
Suzuki Book 2, Nadia Comaneci couldn’t do a walkover, or Michael Jordan
couldn’t make a jump shot. On the first hole, Tiger had a routine six-iron
to the green. He hit the turf behind the ball and came up short, winding up with
a bogey. That led to eight more bogeys, including a triple on fourteen, and a
final score of eighty, ten over par. All day, he missed the fairways. Twice, he
failed to get the ball out of sand traps—a routine shot for golf professionals.
The final humiliation came on the long par-five
eighteenth. After hitting a rare straight drive, Tiger was left with a long
downhill shot to the green, of the sort he used to hit like a laser. After
selecting a fairway wood and winding up in textbook fashion, he lurched down
from the top of his backswing and barely made contact with the top of the ball,
which scuttled along the fairway like a hare and ran into a deep sand trap.
In golf
lingo, Tiger had “topped” it—something beginners and hackers struggling with
their swings do all the time. If he had played such a shot in his prime, the
air would have been blue and the offending club would have been no
more. Now, though, he appears resigned to such indignities. After hitting the
ground half-heartedly with his club, he sighed, took a couple of deep breaths,
and shook his head a couple of times. “I don’t know what to say,” Norman
commented. “I really don’t know what to say.”
Plenty of other people do. For every sports fan calling into
his local sports-radio station, there is a different theory to explain Tiger’s
demise. It’s the injuries: a blown left knee, damaged ankles, back surgery last
year to deal with a pinched nerve. It’s the troubled private life: after being
disgraced in the tabloids in 2009, and getting divorced in 2010, he recently
ended a relationship with the skiier Lindsey Vonn. It’s the missing dad:
Tiger’s beloved father, Earl, died back in 2006. It’s the steroids: though
there is no evidence Tiger has ever used performance-enhancing drugs, rumors
persist about his relationship
with Anthony Galea, a Canadian doctor who was arrested in 2009, but
never charged, on suspicion of supplying athletes with P.E.D.s. It’s Father
Time: Tiger is thirty-nine, and has been playing professionally for nineteen
years.
The truth is that nobody knows what’s up
with Tiger—not even Tiger himself, probably. After his round on Thursday, he said what
he’s been saying for months. He’s working on yet another swing change; because
of his injuries, he hasn’t been able to practice as much as he’d like; things
are coming along, but it’s a long process. “When I do it right, it’s so easy,”
he said. “Its easy to control, it’s easy to do it, it’s easy to hit all my shots.
I just need to do it more often.” Tiger hasn’t lost his capacity for
understatement. But his golf game has disappeared in spectacular fashion. As he
teed off his second round on Thursday morning, the rubberneckers were
gathering.
He had
another dismal round, shooting a six-over-par seventy-six. As he trudged off
the eighteenth green, he was tied for a hundred and fifty-fourth place: second
last. Having missed the cut, he’ll be watching the rest of the tournament
on television. ThatÆs assuming he can bear to watch.
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