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Todd Watson

Tiger's New Roar

Written by Todd Watson
1/29/2013 6 comments
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Spoiler Alert: If you don't want to get an update on The Farmers Insurance golf tournament at storied Torrey Pines in San Diego, stop reading now.

As of Monday afternoon, it looks as though professional golfer Tiger Woods is going to begin his golfing year with a big bang, currently at 15 under and five strokes ahead of last year's victor, Brandt Snedeker.

I happened to be at Torrey Pines exactly six years ago this week, on a business trip, when Tiger also won (at that time the tournament was sponsored by Buick), and that also happens to be the first (and only) time I'd ever seen Tiger play live.

This, of course, was well ahead of the 2008 US Open, which Woods also won in a playoff against veteran player Rocco Mediate, and also a full year and a half ahead of Woods's "personal" issues.

So what's different this time around? In 2007, Snedeker was a tour freshman, and Woods pretty much owned professional golf.

In the past six years, however, a lot has changed, including the fabric of the tour. Irish phenom Rory McIlroy since appeared on the scene, and he's now the one in the Nike spotlight, having just signed a very lucrative deal (and also dealing with the transition to playing with Nike equipment).

Woods, on the other hand, was off in the wilderness, and only last year, after much coaching and a full swing overhaul, did he return even close to looking like the Tiger of old.

What's old is new again, because these past several days in San Diego, the old Tiger has become the new Tiger, or the new Tiger the old... or something along those lines.

He's pretty much owned the leaderboard, and despite a fogged out Saturday third round, his patience has been a virtue -- not to mention his short game, which has been virtuoso -- and never mind, his long drives straight up the middle, and his (typical) laser-lined iron shots.

After his US Open victory in 2008, Tiger revealed he would miss the remainder of that season due to knee surgery, and for those of us who watched the showdown with Mediate, it was pretty clear Woods was in a lot of pain.

This year, Woods seems healthier than ever, his game seems remastered (pardon the pun), and if he keeps it together the last three holes, he will have won once again on the course he played so much of growing up.

Then, more importantly, he strolls into the rest of 2013 -- including the first major of the season, The Masters, in April -- looking as though he could be a real contender, in the majors, the tournaments he enters, and of course, the now-cherished FedEx Cup.

Despite his ups and downs in recent years, Tiger still demands attention, thankfully more now on the course than off. You need only have watched the coverage these past few days of Woods to see the galleries looking bigger than ever, scaring the Tour freshmen but seeming to bolster Wood's confidence in all his shotmaking.

Make no mistake, 2012 was a great year for golf, what with Bubba's curved wedge shot to win out over Louis Oosthuizen in a playoff at Augusta, and McIlroy's missing the cut at the Olympic Club, and probably most notably, the US' failure to win back the Ryder Cup.

But Tiger taking Torrey by four or five strokes out of the gate in 2013, with Rory gazing on from off the side of the green, along with a host of new names we've never heard looking for a piece of the PGA action.

Well, let's just say 2013 might be an even bigger year than 2012 for professional golf, and a bigger one than that for Tiger Woods.

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Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 30, 2013 12:51:39 PM
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Once a sports star, always a sports star (unless you cheat: at the game I mean, rather than in private life).

Todd Watson
Thinkernetter
Wednesday January 30, 2013 12:50:51 PM
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For the record, I was referring to the first U.S. PGA major golf tournament each and every year, The Masters, which is held in Augusta, Georgia in April.  It's arguably the most prestigious golf tournament in the world, one Tiger has won now four times, first at the age of 21 in 1997, then again in 2001, 2002, and 2005.  

Augusta National Golf Club, where the tournament is played every year, was founded by golfer Bobby Jones, the legendary amateur champion, and Clifford Roberts, an astute investment banker in New York.

Jones helped design the golf course, working alongside the esteemed British architect Dr. Alister Mackenzie. Jones's popularity within the game helped attract golf's biggest stars to the Masters, beginning with the inaugural event in 1934.

Roberts oversaw innumerable details of the Tournament. He tirelessly sought to refine the Masters experience for the patrons and competitors and the wider world of golf. 

And also for the record, IBM has been a longtime technology partner for the tournament, helping provide the scoring system and underlying Web (and, now, mobile and video) technology that brings the action to millions of fans in real-time around the world. 

This year's Masters will be held April 11-14.

Paul Whyte
Researcher
Tuesday January 29, 2013 6:18:20 PM
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I was saying the same thing until the 2008 Masters when I actually sat down to understand the game golf. It's really quite interesting and I don't regret the time I spent understanding it. I have not played it though but it's certainly something I will like to do in the near future.

Paul Whyte
Researcher
Tuesday January 29, 2013 5:48:53 PM
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I don't know how you described 'Master'. The guy has nnot won a Major in like 5 years. If you say Master in terms of the main attraction on a golf course, then you are probably right. I don't think we can see again the same dominance he had on the golf course 5 or 6 years ago. He is still though a major force to reckon with in the gold ecosystem

Kim Davis
Thinkernetter
Tuesday January 29, 2013 4:50:01 PM
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Good luck to all who enjoy it, but this is one sport I just can't watch.  More fun to play, probably?

hounhosp
Thinkernetter
Tuesday January 29, 2013 4:04:07 PM
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It is a proof that, Tiger Woods is still the master in the golf ecosystem, no matter what people are thinking or saying.

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