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Regular-article-logo Thursday, 25 April 2024

Tiger aims to roar back

Woods has yet to finish in the top 10 of any tournament since the sport returned after being suspended due to the novel coronavirus

Reuters Mamaroneck Published 17.09.20, 02:06 AM
Tiger Woods

Tiger Woods File picture

Tiger Woods hopes to snap his run of lacklustre performances at the US Open this week, nearly a year after his last PGA Tour victory.

Woods has yet to finish in the top 10 of any tournament since the sport returned after being suspended due to the novel coronavirus, while his last victory came at the Zozo Championship last October when he equalled Sam Snead’s record of 82 PGA Tour wins.

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“This year I really haven’t putted as well as I wanted to, and the times I did make a few swing mistakes, I missed it in the wrong spots,” said Woods.

“I’ve compounded mistakes here and there that ended up not making me able to make pars or a birdie run, and consequently I haven’t put myself in contention to win events.”

The 44-year-old has enjoyed one of the more enduring careers in golf, despite four back surgeries that had once put his future in the sport in doubt.

Woods, who has 15 Majors — three short of Jack Nicklaus’ all-time record, said last month that he was looking to clean up his game ahead of the US Open — which was pushed back from June to September due to the Covid-19 outbreak

He told reporters on Tuesday, however, that he was not trying any radical new approaches to putting.

“I have changed the routine and some of the things that I’ve done over the years, but I still go back to what my dad always taught me, which is obviously putt to the picture,” said Woods.

“Whatever I’m working on at that particular time, once I get out there and I putt, just putt.”

Woods got his first Major after an 11-year drought at the Masters last year, showing he remains a contender on the sport’s biggest stages.

Yet Winged Foot Golf Club will offer little relief should the three-time US Open champion slip up and there will be plenty of contenders ready to pounce if he does, including world No. 1 and 2016 champion Dustin Johnson, as well as No. 2 Jon Rahm.

“The winning scores here have never traditionally been very low. The golf course is going to be hard,” said Woods. “It depends on how difficult they want to set up these pins, give us a chance at it.”

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