AUGUSTA, United States (AFP) – Nineteen months after completing one of the most amazing comeback tales in sports, Tiger Woods will defend his Masters title searching for top form in an unfamiliar Augusta National atmosphere.
Woods captured his 15th major title and the first since the 2008 US Open in April 2019 at Augusta National, completing a recovery from multiple back surgeries that left a normal life in doubt much less a golf career.
After knee surgery four months later, Woods made a comeback in Japan at the Zozo Championship and won his 82nd career US PGA title, matching the all-time win mark set by Sam Snead.
But Woods was struggling with back issues when the Covid-19 pandemic shut down the 2020 season in March, pushing the Masters from April to November and imposing a five-month layoff on Woods between events.
”This entire year has been different for all of us,” Woods said. ”And my run-up to Augusta is unlike anything I’ve ever experienced. That’s just the way it is.”
Since his return, 44-year-old Woods has been a shadow of his former formidable self, sharing 37th at the PGA Championship in August for his best result in six starts and missing the cut at the US Open in September with back issues.
”That’s just the nature of my back. I wish it could be good all the time,” Woods said. ”I have moments where it’s not quite as elastic as I’d like it to be, but I am moving a lot better.”
The five-time Masters champion has also been working on shots he needs to have any hope of contending in an autumn Masters with no spectators and unusual weather conditions.
”I’ve got a few weeks out imaging some of those shots already and I have been for quite a while, ever since the US Open,” Woods said. ”So hopefully I’ll be ready.”
Woods knows Augusta National intimately, where to land shots and how putts will break. But he can’t make normal preparations for a Masters unlike any ever played before.
”It’s not normally this time of year. It’s not normally played this way. We’re not in a Florida swing. This is all different. This whole year has been different for all of us,” Woods said.
”I can’t simulate the ramp-up that I normally have and I don’t think anyone else can either. It will be different for all of us.”