Author Topic: Game Over? Tiger Woods Presses Reset  (Read 1015 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline flowers

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 18,798
Game Over? Tiger Woods Presses Reset
« on: December 02, 2015, 07:06:43 pm »
http://www.wsj.com/articles/game-over-tiger-woods-presses-reset-1449012929

Quote
Four weeks before his 40th birthday, Tiger Woods found himself in an air-conditioned tent Tuesday ruminating about the fragility of the human body.

He was talking about Kobe Bryant, who debuted for the Los Angeles Lakers in 1996, the same year Woods turned pro. But as Woods reflected on Bryant’s decision to retire after this season, it was hard not to notice a parallel between the two of them.

“You add up all those games, it takes a toll on the body,” Woods said. “Eventually it just doesn’t heal anymore.”

Woods has had three back surgeries in the last 21 months. He has not healed. Not fully, anyway, and not enough for him to even remotely resemble the player who long ago won 14 majors. Since 2014, he has fallen from No. 1 in the official world rankings to No. 400, as of this week. His 2015 season was the worst of his career. And his 2016 season may be nonexistent.
Advertisement

At the site of this week’s Hero World Challenge, a tournament that benefits his charitable foundation, Woods said he has yet to begin rehabbing from his two most recent surgeries. The first one, in September, left him optimistic about playing sometime in early 2016. But after a follow-up procedure in late October left him on bed rest, Woods was noncommittal Tuesday about the timing of his return.

“There is no timetable for this,” he said. “So where is the light at the end of the tunnel? I don’t know.”

What Woods does know now is he can walk. That, he said, is about the extent of his athletic capabilities. He spends much of his time these days at home in Jupiter, Fla., playing video games online. With the audio off, he remains anonymous to his opponents. He will play just about any sports game, though when asked about “Rory McIlroy PGA Tour,” the EA Sports game that used to bear his name, Woods smiled and said, “Not that one.”

His first rehab goal is simply to get back to the point where he can kick a soccer ball around with his two children. “I miss doing that,” he said. “If I can get to that, then we can start talking about golf.”

Woods underwent a microdiscectomy in March 2014 to remove disc fragments that were pinching a nerve in his lower back. He returned in under three months, but the pain persisted.

He took two more extended breaks before playing throughout last summer, during which he missed the cut at the U.S. Open, the British Open and the PGA Championship. Even in late August, when he made a stirring run into contention at the Wyndham Championship, Woods said his hip was sore.

His September surgery was another microdiscectomy in the same area, though Woods was vague about an additional operation in October, simply calling it a follow-up procedure.

Alfred Ogden, a neurosurgeon at the Spine Center at Columbia University Medical Center, said the need for a follow-up suggests a possible complication with the September surgery, such as a spinal fluid leak. “That’s the only thing you would put someone on bed rest for after spine surgery these days,” he said.

More so than in most other sports, elite golfers can play well into their 40s. As a cause for hope, Woods often mentions Vijay Singh, the 52-year-old former world No. 1 who has a PGA Tour record 22 wins since his 40th birthday. Singh proved durable in spite of various injuries.

A less encouraging comparison is David Duval, another former No. 1 whose back injury led to a precipitous decline in the early 2000s. Duval, now an analyst for Golf Channel, said even after the injury healed, the fear of hurting himself again created bad habits that wrecked his swing.

He was fun to watch. He is the only reason I even started to watch golf on TV.


Offline massadvj

  • Editorial Advisor
  • *****
  • Posts: 13,341
  • Gender: Male
Re: Game Over? Tiger Woods Presses Reset
« Reply #1 on: December 02, 2015, 07:15:44 pm »
“You add up all those games, it takes a toll on the body,” Woods said. “Eventually it just doesn’t heal anymore.”

This is especially true if you took steroids when you were younger, Tiger.  Not saying you did.  Just saying.

Offline mountaineer

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 78,825
Re: Game Over? Tiger Woods Presses Reset
« Reply #2 on: December 02, 2015, 07:28:00 pm »
“You add up all those games, it takes a toll on the body,” Woods said. “Eventually it just doesn’t heal anymore.”

This is especially true if you took steroids when you were younger, Tiger.  Not saying you did.  Just saying.
That, and a wildly violent swing that creates too much torque.
Support Israel's emergency medical service. afmda.org

Offline flowers

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 18,798
Re: Game Over? Tiger Woods Presses Reset
« Reply #3 on: December 02, 2015, 07:28:26 pm »
“You add up all those games, it takes a toll on the body,” Woods said. “Eventually it just doesn’t heal anymore.”

This is especially true if you took steroids when you were younger, Tiger.  Not saying you did.  Just saying.
Yeah that was real disappointing when that came out.