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December 2009 - Posts

  • Tiger scandal overshadows 2009 season

    For some golf fans, February 19 effectively marked the start of the season.

    It wasn’t because Phil Mickelson finally got his game on track with a 63 at Riviera, rather it was the day Tiger Woods posted a statement on his Web site that filled golf with optimism it had been missing for eight months.

    “I’m now ready to play again,” Woods said, announcing his return from knee surgery.

    What followed were plenty of memories in 2009. The fairy tale that turned into a heartbreaker at Turnberry when 59-year-old Tom Watson failed to make par from the middle of the 18th fairway and lost the British Open in a playoff. Henrik Stenson making more news for stripping down to his skivvies than for winning The Players Championship. Michelle Wie winning more tournaments than Vijay Singh.

    Too bad so few people will remember.

    Because the year effectively ended Dec. 11 with another statement Woods posted on his Web site.

    “After much soul searching, I have decided to take an indefinite break from professional golf,” he said.

    Mark those two dates as the alpha and omega of the 2009 season, and allow yourself to soak up some of the moments in between.

    It wasn’t the best year in golf—it can’t be, not with as much focus on the runner-up as the winner.

    Angel Cabrera won the Masters at the expense of Kenny Perry, at 48 trying to become the oldest major champion. Lucas Glover’s magnificent 8-iron to the 16th at Bethpage Black was overshadowed by Mickelson missing two short par putts. Stewart Cink denied the golf world one of its greatest stories by beating Watson in the playoff. And Y.E. Yang made more news for whom he beat (Woods) than what he won (the PGA Championship).

    With a putt here and a chip there, the major champions could have just as easily been Chad Campbell, Ricky Barnes and Chris Wood.

    Watson might have been the most celebrated runner-up in history, trumping Greg Norman’s collapse in the 1996 Masters. Even five months later, it all seems so impossible that a player past his prime even by Champions Tour standards could crouch over an 8-foot putt with a chance to put his name on the claret jug again, 34 years after it first was engraved.

    A devastating loss? It apparently was for reporters, but not for the man.

    “This ain’t a funeral, you know,” Watson said with that gap-tooth grin as he walked into the media center.

    Mickelson also found perspective in defeat after another amazing tale that lacked only the happy ending. His world rocked by his wife being diagnosed with breast cancer, Mickelson again found himself on the cusp of an elusive U.S. Open title. The long birdie at the 12th. The eagle on the 13th. Bethpage already was flooded by a week of rain, and the tear ducts were starting to leak.

    Then, he missed par putts from 3 feet and 8 feet over the final four holes, and made history as a runner-up for the fifth time.

    “Now that’s over, I’ve got more important things going on. And … oh, well,” Mickelson said.

    Perry showed golf is a game for the ages by winning twice and finishing No. 5 on the money list. The teenage infusion came from Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, who cracked the top 10 in the world ranking by the end of the year, and from 18-year-old Ryo Ishikawa, the youngest player to win the money title on a recognized tour (Japan).

    Woods showed again why he is measured by a different standard. Despite seven victories worldwide, the FedEx Cup, another PGA Tour money title, Vardon Trophy for lowest scoring average and every award for player of the year, he had to explain why it was a great year without a major championship.

    Instead, he won a different kind of Grand Slam—a victory in his final start before every major.

    For all the grousing about the FedEx cup, it delivered the ultimate Cinderella in Heath Slocum, who qualified for the playoffs by the slimmest of margins, then won the opening event over Woods, Steve Stricker, Padraig Harrington and Ernie Els. The last three playoff events were won by the top three players in the world ranking—Woods, Mickelson and Stricker. So something is working.

    Wie, meanwhile, might have the best of two worlds. She appears to be loving everything about college life at Stanford—something hardly any of her peers ever experienced—and she had a blast on the course, too, winning for the first time and playing a key role in the Americans’ victory in Solheim Cup.

    Arnold Palmer turned 80, and while this doesn’t count as a present, it was announced a few weeks before his birthday that Jack Nicklaus would be joining him for the ceremonial tee shot at the Masters next year.

    Golf was not without a scandal. The tour announced Doug Barron became the first player to test positive for a performance-enhancing substance. This didn’t make a lot of news because so many fans didn’t know who Doug Barron was.

    And by the end of the year, there was only one scandal.

    The way the last month has gone, there was really only one story.

    It was Tiger Woods.

    And it had nothing to do with his golf.




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  • Golf Looking to Fill Tiger Woods Void

    The sudden roar from three holes away was enough to make Rory McIlroy turn his head.

    The cheer was for a birdie, no doubt. And it was loud enough so thousands of people had to be watching. McIlroy quickly deduced, along with everyone else behind the third green at Doral Golf Resort, that such a reaction could be for only one player.

    “Must have been Ernie,” he said with a wink and a grin.

    The freckled-face kid from Northern Ireland showed a sharp sense of humor, for he knew that Ernie Els was playing that day with Tiger Woods. Then came another cheer, this more like an aftershock, and McIlroy shook his head and continued walking to the tee.

    “Definitely, Ernie,” McIlroy said with a broad smile, aware he was fooling no one.

    There are cheers for birdies, and there are cheers for Woods, and there is a difference.

    Golf is louder when Woods plays, whether in Miami or Melbourne, San Diego or Shanghai. It is likely to be a little more quiet now that he is on an “indefinite leave” to try to save his marriage from a sex scandal that has put golf on the front pages in the offseason.

    No one knows when he will return to the U.S. PGA Tour, and that might include Woods.

    This is not the first time golf has been missing its star attraction. Woods was gone eight months after winning the 2008 U.S. Open to recover from knee surgery. He missed the two months leading up to that U.S. Open with a lesser knee surgery. And he missed two months in 2006 while coping with the death of his father.

    “No one can take the place of Tiger Woods,” Stewart Cink said. “The rest of us are going to have to put on a better show.”

    The uncertainty of his return—not only the timing, but possible fallout from his behavior—leaves golf in more dire need to find someone who can fill the void.

    “There’s plenty of global superstars on the way up to replace him,” said Graeme McDowell, who replaced Woods at his Chevron World Challenge two weeks ago and finished second. “But they’re just not quite ready to replace him yet. We need him to hang out for another four or five years.”

    Even that might not be enough time.

    Jack Nicklaus once ran down a list of players most likely to challenge Woods, and once he got beyond the usual suspects, Nicklaus feigned a look over his shoulder and said, “It could be some kid out there who hasn’t even started playing yet.”

    Nicklaus said that 10 years ago. Not much has changed.

    The second-biggest draw in golf might be Phil Mickelson, the chief foil for Woods through the years.

    Mickelson already is wildly popular, not only for his willingness to take on risks inside the ropes, but for spending hours signing autographs. The public embraced him even more upon learning his wife, Amy, had been diagnosed with breast cancer.

    In the months before Woods became engulfed in the scandal, the buzz about 2010 was the prospect of Woods and Mickelson colliding at the top of their games.

    “Given the finish he had to the year, if Phil comes out strong, then he’s the replacement,” said Roger Maltbie, a former tour winner and now a TV analyst.

    The search is for someone younger, however, and golf rarely has had this many fresh faces.

    McIlroy became only the second player—Sergio Garcia was the other—to crack the top 10 in the world ranking before turning 21. With his mop of brown hair, playful swagger and raw skill, McIlroy backed up the early hype when he won in Dubai, tied for third in the U.S. PGA Championship and nearly won the European Tour money title.

    “If he starts off well, the focus is going to be about Rory again,” said his manager, Chubby Chandler. “I didn’t realize this at the time, but one reason for the tremendous hype about Rory was that Tiger wasn’t around that much.”

    Some attention is shifting to Rickie Fowler, who lost in a U.S. PGA Tour playoff and made it through Q-school before his 21st birthday. Then again, golf is loaded with young players who have a great week, even a great month. What set Woods apart, among other things, is that he had a great 13 years.

    It’s possible the next great player can emerge from this collection of youth, a group that includes Ryo Ishikawa of Japan, who at 19 became the youngest to win the Japan Golf Tour money title; Dustin Johnson, already a two-time winner who is tall, athletic and hits it a mile; or even Adam Scott, who just turned 30 and has been linked this year to Kate Hudson and Ana Ivanovic.

    “I can’t imagine anyone having all the tools Tiger has, making huge putts when he needs them over and over and over again,” Maltbie said. “The things he does are amazing. We just haven’t see that from the kids yet.”

     




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  • Tiger Woods Scandal the Biggest in Sport?

    The biggest news as the Tiger Woods scandal played out for the third week on gossip sites and chat boards everywhere wasn’t really news.

    It might not have even been his wife, Elin, not that it matters much anymore.

    A 2-day-old photo of a blonde woman in sunglasses pumping gas into an SUV outside Orlando went viral—which is about all that seems to matter anymore— because, gasp, the woman was not wearing a wedding ring.

    Perhaps you’ve heard that Woods and his wife, Elin, are having marital problems.

    There’s really not a lot more to the whole thing except for the scale of what happened and the size of the stage it has been playing out on. The greatest golfer ever is exposed as perhaps one of the greatest philanderers ever and, of course, we want to know all the sordid details.

    Transgressions. Infidelity. Sins. Woods has used all three words himself in postings on his Web site owning up to some of his actions.

    If only he had cheated on the golf course instead of off it. Marked down a 4 when it should have been a 5, or maybe kicked a ball from behind a tree when no one was looking.

    He might have recovered from that. A lot of baseball players who cheated with steroids certainly have.

    But he’ll never really recover from this.

    “In a lot of ways Tiger Woods has broken the hearts of a lot of people who looked at him as a role model who was above all those things,” said Richard Lapchick, director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sports at the University of Central Florida. “It was just so far out of bounds with what anyone considers normal behavior.”

    Indeed, this scandal is more about celebrity than sport. This wasn’t Pete Rose betting on baseball, Bill Belichick spying on his opponents or Marion Jones bulking up to win Olympic gold.

    But it is Tiger Woods. And that’s all that matters.

    “I don’t know if there was anybody ever like Tiger Woods,” Lapchick said. “We had an African-American athlete who totally transcended race and dominated a sport maybe like no one else who seemed to have this perfect life. It turned out not to be true.”

    Count Lapchick among those who initially thought Woods would largely escape much fallout from the accident and early reports of infidelity. Those in a graduate class he teaches in sports management thought so, too, predicting Woods would be welcomed back warmly when he returned to the course.

    That was before every day brought another revelation, and more and more women were linked with Woods. Now his students have changed their minds, and Lapchick has, too.

    Woods’ sponsors are apparently coming to the same conclusion. No matter that few people know what Accenture does, the consulting company knows it doesn’t want to be associated with Woods anymore.

    And although AT&T doesn’t mind spending millions to be a part of the 2012 U.S. Olympic effort, does the company really want Woods to make his return— whenever that might be—with its logo still on his golf bag?

    What astounds Lapchick—who is not only a distinguished academic but a pioneer for racial equality in sports—is how the Woods scandal has morphed into something never before seen in sports. Even the sexual assault charges against Kobe Bryant—while arguably more serious—didn’t create nearly this kind of frenzy.

    Bryant has rebounded to a large degree, helped by the passing of time and his dominance on the basketball court. He has his endorsements back, and no one asks him any more what happened that night in a Colorado hotel.

    There are, however, still some who remember the repulsive details of the allegations who will never cheer for Bryant again.

    Like Bryant, what Woods did had nothing to do with sports. Still, it might end up being the biggest scandal ever in sports.

    Nothing else comes close.

    “It’s so far the opposite of what we thought that it makes it so much more dramatic,” Lapchick said. “I think it will always be with him.”

     




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  • Anger in Sweden Over Tiger Woods Scandal

    During the good times, Tiger Woods could find a perfect getaway in Sweden—a quiet and secluded place to avoid the media spotlight.

    There have been Christmas celebrations in a remote area of northern Sweden in a house owned by relatives of his Swedish wife, Elin Nordegren. There have been summer days spent undisturbed in the couple’s luxury apartment in central Stockholm. And his wife recently purchased a secluded house on an island in the archipelago, a short boat ride outside the capital.

    But if Woods is looking for somewhere to ride out the media storm surrounding his infidelity, Sweden may no longer be the place to go.

    “I think his reception would be rather chilly,” said Billy McCormac, an American who has lived in Sweden for 14 years and heads the prominent think tank Timbro. “I think things are just too raw right now.”

    The Woods sex scandal has indeed struck a particularly raw nerve in Sweden, where Nordegren’s transition from being a nanny for golfer Jesper Parnevik to the wife of one of the world’s most famous athletes was long seen as a fairy-tale romance.

    Over the last five years, sightings of the couple on the streets of Stockholm or in nearby Vaxholm in the archipelago—where Nordegren grew up— helped create a sense of connection to a man renowned for his reclusive persona.

    But like the drop in temperatures that brought a blizzard of snow over the Scandinavian country on Tuesday, Woods’ admitted betrayal of his wife has turned public opinion considerably cooler.

    “We have taken him to heart and almost viewed him like one of us,” said Niklas Olovzon, a sponsorship and brand expert who heads the communications agency S&B. “Of course that has made this a much bigger deal. … I don’t think we’ll forgive him as quickly.”

    Instead, there is an outpouring of sympathy and support for Nordegren, who has claims to fame in Sweden beyond her marriage to Woods. Nordegren’s mother, Barbro Holmberg, is a well-known Social Democratic politician and former migration minister while her father Thomas Nordegren is a prominent radio journalist.

    “She comes from two sort of Swedish houses of nobility, so there is a sense that this is personal,” McCormac said. “I’m not sure how much the Swedish public embraced Elin before this. But now, that sense of ownership and that sense of communion with her has gotten stronger.”

    That’s been evident in the country’s newspapers during the last few weeks, where the numerous front-page headlines and articles have focused as much on Nordegren as on Woods.

    There has been constant speculation about whether she’ll stay with her husband, advice about how to repair her marriage, and jokes about why she used a golf club to smash the back passenger windows of Woods’ SUV the night of his infamous car crash outside their home in Florida. Local police said his wife told them she did it to help get her husband out.

    In a country that prides itself on gender equality and independent women, the image of a golf club-wielding Nordegren is a source of widespread satisfaction.

    “For us, it was almost a positive thing that she smashed the car window,” Olovzon said. “We like strong women in a lot of ways.”

    Britta Svensson, a columnist in the newspaper Expressen, summed it up like this:

    “A week ago, Tiger and Elin were the cutest couple on the globe,” Svensson wrote shortly after the reports of numerous mistresses started seeping out. “Now our Swedish hearts are brimming with pride that our own Elin—not a regular nanny but the daughter of a Social Democratic minister and Swedish Radio journalist—didn’t take any … Elin is our heroine.”

    The same can no longer be said of Woods, of course, regardless of golf’s immense popularity in the country.

    Despite its short summers, Sweden has nearly half a million golfers in a population of little more than 9 million, including a number of top pros like Henrik Stenson.

    But to win the fans back, Woods has to get back on the course and win more titles, said Tommy Jeppsson, the editor of the Swedish version of Golf Digest.

    “Time has an incredible ability to heal things like this,” said Jeppsson, pointing out that a number of famous men have been able to resuscitate their careers after sex scandals. “When you think about (actor) Hugh Grant today, you only view his scandal as a bump in the road—he didn’t drive off a cliff. I think this will be a bump in the road for Tiger Woods as well.”

    Seeing Woods play in a tournament like the Scandinavian Masters has long been a dream for Swedish golf fans. If Woods does decide to end his indefinite break from golf, Jeppsson said that’s not likely to change.

    “He would be very welcome,” Jeppsson said. “I don’t think anyone would miss seeing Tiger Woods play golf just because they’re a bit peeved about what he’s alleged to have done.”

    But, as McCormac pointed out, Woods may not want to test his welcome too soon.

    “I think the media circus needs to die down first,” McCormac said. “Maybe in six months, or, say, around the summer time. (Swedes) are very used to walking down the street, and say, ‘Oh, there’s the prime minister,’ or ‘There’s that rock star.’ Given a bit of time, given a bit of space, I’d say even (Tiger and Elin) will be able to do that eventually.”




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  • LET Unveils 2010 Schedule

    Executive Director of the Ladies European Tour (LET), Alexandra Armas, today announced the tournament schedule for the 2010 season.

    There are 27 events in 20 different countries, including four new stops in New Zealand, Morocco, Slovakia and China. Two additional events, in Turkey and Scotland, will return to the schedule after a one year absence. This surpasses the 2009 season when there were 23 tournaments in 18 countries across the world.

    The season will start with the inaugural Pegasus New Zealand Women’s Open hosted by Christchurch at Pegasus Golf Club from February 25-28. The next new event is the Princess Lalla Meryem Cup at Royal Golf Anfa Mohammedia from March 18-20, which will take place during the same week as the Hassan II Trophy on the men’s European Tour.

    From May 27-30, the LET will make an historic first visit to Slovakia with the Ladies Slovak Open at Gray Bear Golf Club. There will also be a second event in China, the week before the popular Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open. The Anji King Valley Ladies Open will be played at Anji King Valley Golf Club from October 21-24.

    After a one year hiatus, the LET returns to National Golf Club in Antalya for the Turkish Ladies Open from May 6-9 and to Scotland for the Ladies Scottish Open, at Archerfield Links in East Lothian, from August 18-20. The Finnair Masters will take place for the sixth straight year at Helsinki Golf Club in Tali, Finland, from August 27-29.

    Additionally, there will be several new tournament venues. The Women’s Australian Open moves to Commonwealth Golf Club in Melbourne, the ABN AMRO Ladies Open moves to Golfclub Broekpolder in Rotterdam, the Netherlands and the Tenerife Ladies Open returns to Buenavista Golf.

    The Ricoh Women’s British Open returns to Royal Birkdale in England, with the AIB Ladies Irish Open, supported by Failte Ireland, taking place at Killeen Castle in County Meath the following week. The tournament will provide the only opportunity for players from both sides of the Atlantic to test their skills on The 2011 Solheim Cup venue in a competitive environment and expects to draw a quality field of international competitors from all over the world.

    Armas said: “We are extremely pleased with next year’s schedule following on from a spectacular 2009 season. Despite the tough financial climate, there has been massive interest in hosting a Ladies European Tour event. The players’ efforts have helped to make every tournament a great experience and have given value to all stakeholders. The schedule reflects the continued growing interest in women’s golf.

    “There are still some details to be confirmed, such as venues and prize money, but these will be announced in the coming months and we will be playing at quality golf courses. We also anticipate that total prize money will be at least equal to, if not greater, than in 2009. I would like to thank all of our partners for their continued commitment to the Ladies European Tour and its players. We look forward to working with all involved to ensure the tour’s continued success in 2010 and beyond.”




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  • Tiger Woods Won't Ever be Viewed the Same

    Practically every new twist in the shocking tale of Tiger Woods includes an aerial view of his Florida home where his troubles began, when he pulled his SUV out of the driveway and drove it into a tree.

    More questions arise when one surveys the expanse of grass across the street — the practice range at Isleworth.

    Perhaps the most pressing: When will Woods slip into his spikes, step out of his house and hit golf balls again?

    There is no telling when the world’s No. 1 player will choose to return to the PGA Tour and the massive galleries that, most certainly, will not gaze upon him quite the way they did at his previous 253 tour events.

    Woods has been out of the public eye since the car crash and subsequent allegations of extramarital affairs took Tigermania into startling new territory during Thanksgiving weekend. He went 13 years without a hint of scandal, the first $1 billion athlete with barely a blemish, guarded with the media even in good times. That’s not likely to change now.

    “I am dealing with my behavior and personal failings behind closed doors with my family,” Woods said while confessing to “transgressions” on his Web site last week. “Those feelings should be shared by us alone.”

    The greater mystery is his future.

    “I think he’s held at a different standard than everybody else out there,” Kenny Perry said Friday at the Chevron World Challenge. “This will be interesting to see how he handles this, though. This is a totally different knock on him when he gets out there and plays next year.”

    Until the crash in the wee hours of Nov. 27, anticipation about 2010 in golf was geared toward Woods’ pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’ record in the majors, especially a year with Pebble Beach (U.S. Open) and St. Andrews (British Open) in the rotation.

    That has been replaced by uncertainty and uneasiness.

    A sport that promoted its wholesome image as its biggest asset now has a tawdry mess on its hands because of its star player, who happens to be among the most famous athletes in the world.

    “What’s interesting to me about this situation is that while its bad in the short term, for golf, on a global basis, it has moved from being a sport to having iconic, celebrity status, and a whole host of other people are now interested,” said John Rowady, president of rEvolution, a Chicago-based sports marketing and media agency.

    “And it may be a sport that is not prepared for that kind of publicity.”

    The timing was not the greatest. The PGA Tour is struggling to find title sponsors at four tournaments and renew deals with at least a half dozen others. It also will start negotiations on a network TV deal that ends in 2012.

    “I think one of our biggest selling points for the corporate world is that we are relatively controversy-free,” Geoff Ogilvy said at the start of the year. “We don’t generally have too many golfers getting into trouble like some other athletes in other sports do. We’re pretty squeaky-clean like that. It’s been like that for a long time. It doesn’t really seem like it’s going to change.”

    PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem has been silent during all this. He hasn’t made himself available for comment except for a statement in support of Woods’ family and the player’s request for privacy.

    Asked if Finchem would take questions about concerns for golf’s image or whether it would affect business, spokesman Ty Votaw said the tour does not comment on “hypothetical situations, conjecture and guesswork.”

    At the start of the decade, Finchem was at Pebble Beach talking about how golf was in good hands. He cited the new arrivals of Adam Scott, Charles Howell III, David Gossett, young players who represented the values inherent in golf.

    No need to mention Woods.

    No one ever imagined his name would be splashed across anything but the sports pages, except for being on the cover of Time magazine in 2000 during one of the greatest summers of golf.

    Padraig Harrington was quick to distinguish between Woods as a player and a person.

    “It’s very much a private matter there,” Harrington said. “He wasn’t … speeding or had a DUI and hurt somebody. It really is a family matter. Hopefully, that’s the worst that golf could ever do. But how it reflects on golf? I suppose things like this have happened before at times, and we move on.

    “I would still say golf—I know this may be saying it from inside the sport—is constantly the No. 1 sport with the moral ethics and things like that. So I think we’re in a very strong position going forward.”

    Woods’ corporate sponsors said they are standing by him. Most sports marketing consultants believe the scandal involving his personal life will have little bearing on TV ratings or contract negotiations. No one can be sure, however, just as no can predict where or when he will return to golf.

    “There’s no impact on the sport itself other than the fact its best asset is a little damaged right now,” said Michael Gordon, CEO of Group Gordon Strategic Communications, a crisis PR firm in New York.

    “But it starts with Tiger. He’s at the top of the pyramid,” Gordon said. “When Tiger is hurt, other assets could get hurt, too—potentially the PGA Tour, sponsors, his family. It’s a little bit of a domino affect, and he’s the first domino.”

    His peers at the Chevron World Challenge—the tournament Woods hosts but did not attend—have largely been supportive without passing judgment, perhaps because they realize that Woods is their meal ticket. They are playing for $5.75 million this week, a snapshot of life on the PGA Tour made possible by Woods and his enormous appeal.

    Total prize money was $65 million the year Woods turned pro in 1996. They played for $275 million this year.

    Stewart Cink is among those who have jokingly suggested Woods is not human, having won 82 times around the world and 14 majors. After losing to him by a record margin at the Match Play Championship last year, Cink said, “I think maybe we ought to slice him open to see what’s inside. Maybe nuts and bolts.”

    Woods twice mentioned in statements during the last week that he was, indeed, “human.” Will that make him seem more vulnerable as a player?

    “I don’t think that whatever comes out of this will affect his golf because he’s a professional, and part of being a professional is to separate your personal life from what you do on the course,” Cink said. “I’ve had plenty of times when I came to the golf course in a tournament, and I was just a wreck off the course. … And you have no choice but to just leave that. It’s not always real easy, but he’ll find a way, and he’ll be fine.”

    Greg Norman, who preceded Woods as golf’s biggest draw, understands scrutiny into one’s personal life, having disclosed in October that his 15-month marriage to tennis star Chris Evert was ending.

    He believes golf is bigger than any one player and will be fine. And while he can empathize with Woods’ public life on display, Norman doesn’t feel sorry for him.

    “Hey, he’s the No. 1 player in the world,” Norman said Saturday at the Australian Open. “Publicity is going to follow you no matter what you do, whether you win tournaments, lose tournaments and whatever happens.”

    Woods has started at Torrey Pines every year since 2006 when healthy. Tournament director Tom Wilson said he recently met with PGA Tour security consultants about what needs to be done, if Woods chooses this event to mark his return.

    “We might need to add a few chairs in the media center,” Wilson said.

    If keeping together his family—wife Elin and two children—is a priority, Woods might wait longer.

    “Is this going to make him stronger? We’ll find out,” Perry said. “Is this really going to get inside his head a little bit and really going to mess with him? I don’t know how the crowd is … going to attack him. Are they going to verbally abuse him out there? We don’t know.

    “I don’t think it’s going to change our tour next year at all,” he said. “Only time will tell.”

    Woods has tried to quell minor issues in the past with one sentence in a news conference or one posting on his Web site. Though three statements have been posted on his Web site since the accident, they’ve done little to answer lingering questions. As a result, media outlets have shown no signs of scaling back in their hot pursuit of information.

    “When you get nonsporting media spending money on stories, whether they’re true or false, it’s just fanning the flames,” Rowady said.

    Either way, he said the next few months will go a long way, starting with Woods returning to golf. He said Woods will need to raise his game not only on the course, but for the tour and its sponsors, his own sponsors and TV partners.

    “If it’s true that golf is a gentleman’s game, it benefits by the way he finishes this process,” Rowady said. “How he comes out and eventually speaks and plays could be an asset, and then it heightens the awareness. What’s surprising to me is how quickly people are willing to tear him down. I don’t know that anyone benefits by making Tiger Woods into a villain.”




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  • Jim Furyk Clinches Win with Closing 67

    Jim Furyk had a lot of expectations when he arrived at the Chevron World Challenge. They didn’t include winning for the first time in more than two years.

    He is good friends with tournament host Tiger Woods, his partner for nine matches in cup competitions. They are an odd couple on the surface, linked mainly by the grit in their golf games.


    JIM FURYK Picture © Getty Images

    Furyk sent Woods a text message when he heard about the Nov. 27 car accident and never heard back. Before long, speculation gave way to allegations of extramarital affairs, until Woods posted a statement on his Web site acknowledging “personal failings.”

    “I expected a lot of questions would be asked about Tiger a lot this week,” Furyk said after closing with a 5-under 67 for a one-shot victory Sunday. “I can honestly say not one person has asked me for a quote or an opinion or anything like that. He and his wife are friends of mine. And as friends, you want to support them and wish them the best.”

    No one bothered him because Furyk was in the middle of the pack in the 18-man field at Sherwood Country Club.

    He was easy to miss until the final round, when he took the lead with a wedge to close range for birdie on the 10th, kept it by knocking in a 35-foot par putt on the 17th hole and making his best shot of the day the winning shot— a 9-iron from 146 yards on the 18th hole that landed near the cup and spun 5 feet away for a birdie.

    Even more noticeable was the red shirt Furyk wore on Sunday, the color Woods has made famous during his 82 worldwide victories and 14 major championships.

    Furyk said that was a coincidence, nothing more.

    Even so, it was a fitting conclusion to a week dominated by talk of Woods.

    Woods wasn’t around to present the trophy to one of his favorite players on the PGA Tour. He withdrew because of unspecified injuries from his accident, yet he remained part of every conversation because of worldwide publicity over his off-course scandal.

    Woods posted a statement on his Web site as the final round was under way to thank his sponsors, staff and volunteers. “And I am sincerely sorry I was unable to fulfill my duties as host and player in this important event,” he said.

    Furyk recalls wearing red—a rarity for him—in the final round of the 2007 Canadian Open, his last victory at a tournament recognized by the world golf ranking.

    “Maybe I need to start,” he said. “But no, I didn’t mean to make a statement or didn’t really think about it. So you like the outfit? I’m curious what my grade is.”

    Considering it was bright red with a brown stripe and brown pants, leave that to fashion experts.

    His golf—especially at the end—was simply superb.

    With a one-shot lead and in a horrible spot in the bunker well below the 17th green, Furyk played it safe to 35 feet beyond the hole and was hopeful of lagging a tricky putt to 3 feet to make no worse than bogey. Instead, he watched it break sharply to the right over the final few feet and drop into the cup for an unlikely par.

    “It was a deep sigh of relief that the ball went in,” Furyk said. “I knew at that point it was still my tournament to win, and I played very aggressively down the stretch.”

    He followed that with a 9-iron from 146 yards that landed near the hole and spun back to 5 feet. Before he could putt, Furyk saw on the leaderboard that Lee Westwood had birdied the 17th and was tied for the lead. He calmly rapped in the birdie putt.

    Westwood, who recently won the European tour money title for the second time this decade, had a chance to force a playoff until he failed to hole his chip from just off the green. Then, he missed the short par putt for a 70 that left him in a tie for third with Padraig Harrington, who twice chipped in for eagle on his way to a 70.

    Graeme McDowell, the replacement for Woods at this tournament, had to hole out from 18th fairway to tie Furyk, and his shot looked as though it had a chance until it spun by the hole. The birdie gave him second place alone.

    That was enough to move McDowell to No. 38 in the world, making him a lock for the Masters next year. The top 50 at the end of the year earn invitations to Augusta National, and McDowell had decided not to chase ranking points at the end of the year.

    Then came a phone call about Woods withdrawing, and everything changed quickly.

    “Timing is everything,” McDowell said. “To get the call-up was good, although I wish it had been different circumstances. Sometimes this game gives you something back when you least expect it.”

    Furyk said he wouldn’t be surprised to get a text from Woods for winning his tournament for the first time. And if he did, “then I would reply and wish him the best.”

    “Tough times,” Furyk said. “So they need the support of their friends right now, and I know that people are thinking about them.”




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  • Robert Allenby Wins in a Playoff

    Australia’s Robert Allenby kept his cool to win the Sun City Challenge on the third hole of a playoff at Gary Player Country Club on Sunday, pipping defending champion Henrik Stenson of Sweden.


    ROBERT ALLENBY  Picture © Getty Images

    Both players finished 72 holes in 11-under-par 277, Allenby shooting 71 in the final round and Stenson catching him with a 69. The pair then played the 18th hole three times before Allenby coolly hit a six-iron to within five feet of the flag to set up an easy par.

    Stenson hit his approach shot into the grandstand, from where he had a free drop but he could only pitch the ball 30 feet past the hole.

    The world number seven had earlier three-putted the 18th hole in regulation play to make bogey. Allenby also bogeyed the last in regulation play after a poor chip from the fringe.

    South African Tim Clark and England’s Ross Fisher finished on 10-under-par 278, while overnight leader Retief Goosen fired a 75 in the final round, the loss of strokes at the par-five 14th and at the 18th costing him his second title.

    Stenson, who began the day four shots off the pace, went out in level-par 36, but seemed to have the title in his lap when he eagled the par-five 10th and birdied the par-four 13th to go to 11 under.

    He hit his second shot on the par-five 14th hole well over the green and had to hack the ball from thick grass next to a cart-path, over dense bush and into a bunker short of the green on his way to a bogey.

    He then birdied 15 and 17 before his bogey at 18 led to the playoff.

    Allenby put together a blemish-free front nine, with a birdie at the par-three seventh but had three birdies and three bogeys on the back nine.

    “It was a tough day scoring-wise, even though the conditions were no different to any other day,” Allenby said. “But I guess it’s the same as any final day. I was cruising along and then I blocked a couple of irons on the back nine.”

    “When Henrik hit it right on the third playoff hole, I knew that if I wanted to win the tournament that was the time for a good shot. It was the perfect yardage for a nice high six-iron, I felt good and confident over the ball and it was pretty much perfect.”

    Allenby said he was proud to become the first Australian to win the invitational 12-man tournament, which is in its 29th year. Australian major winners Greg Norman and Steve Elkington made a couple of appearances each at the tournament but did not win.

    “I was pretty determined to be the first Australian to win here and to make that reality is pretty special and I had a lot of emotion tucked up inside,” Allenby said.

     




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  • Adam Scott Coasts to Five Shot Australian Open Win

    Adam Scott held off Stuart Appleby to win the Australian Open title by five shots on Sunday, recording his first tournament victory in over 19 months.


    ADAM SCOTT  Picture © Getty Images

    It was also the first professional title on home soil for Australian Scott, who has slipped from third to number 54 in the world rankings after a poor year on the PGA Tour where he missed 10 cuts in 19 events.

    Scott fired a level-par 72 for a 15-under 273 total to finish ahead of compatriot Appleby (75), with American Bryce Molder (68), New Zealander Michael Long (70) and Nick O’Hearn (74) tied a distant third nine shots off the lead.

    “It is very special to win here, it has taken me a while,” Scott told reporters after his final round.

    “I have worked really hard and I have been saying it all year even though I have been paying terribly but it pays off, you have to stick with it.

    “A lot of people have helped me get through this …. it’s great we have been able to turn it around and get back on track.”

    Starting the day with a two-shot lead over Appleby, Scott began nervously at the New South Wales course, dropping a shot at the par four first as Appleby birdied to bring the duo level.

    However, the 29-year-old Scott regained his composure to fire three birdies in his next four holes, regaining the advantage as Appleby dropped shots at the third, sixth and seventh. As the wind strengthened Appleby continued to struggle, dropping shots at the 10th and 12th as Scott opened up a seven-stroke lead.

    However, missed short putts at the 13th and 16th by Scott and a birdie for Appleby at the 14th narrowed the deficit to three.

    A bogey at 17 by Appleby eased the pressure on Scott, who finished in style with a birdie at the par-five last.

    It was a 15th worldwide title for the Australian, who had not won since the Byron Nelson Championship on the PGA Tour in April 2008.




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  • Racial Aspect to Tiger Woods Scandal

    Amid all the headlines generated by Tiger Woods’ troubles—the puzzling car accident, the suggestions of marital turmoil and multiple mistresses—little attention has been given to the race of the women linked with the world’s greatest golfer.

    Except in the black community.

    When three white women were said to be romantically involved with Woods in addition to his blonde, Swedish wife, blogs, airwaves and barbershops started humming, and Woods’ already tenuous standing among many blacks took a beating.

    On the nationally syndicated Tom Joyner radio show, Woods was the butt of jokes all week.

    “Thankfully, Tiger, you didn’t marry a black woman. Because if a sister caught you running around with a bunch of white hoochie-mamas,” one parody suggests in song, she would have castrated him.

    “The Grinch’s Theme Song” didn’t stop there: “The question everyone in America wants to ask you is, how many white women does one brother waaant?”

    As one blogger, Robert Paul Reyes, wrote: “If Tiger Woods had cheated on his gorgeous white wife with black women, the golfing great’s accident would have been barely a blip in the blogosphere.”

    The darts reflect blacks’ resistance to interracial romance. They also are a reflection of discomfort with a man who has smashed barriers in one of America’s whitest sports and assumed the mantle of the world’s most famous athlete, once worn by Muhammad Ali and Michael Jordan.

    But Woods has declined to identify himself as black, and famously chose the term “Cablinasian” (Caucasian, black, Indian and Asian) to describe the racial mixture he inherited from his African-American father and Thai mother.

    This vexed some blacks, but it hasn’t stopped them from claiming Woods as one of their own. Or from disapproving of his marriage to Elin Nordegren, despite blacks’ historical fight against white racist opponents of mixed marriage.

    On the one hand, Ebonie Johnson Cooper doesn’t care that Tiger Woods’ wife and alleged mistresses are white because Woods is “quote-unquote not really black.”

    “But at the same time we still see him as a black man with a white woman, and it makes a difference,” said Johnson Cooper, a 26-year-old African-American from New York City. “There’s just this preservation thing we have among one another. We like to see each other with each other.”

    Black women have long felt slighted by the tendency of famous black men to pair with white women, and many have a list of current transgressors at the ready.

    “We’ve discussed this for years among black women,” said Denene Millner, author of several books on black relationships. “Why is it when they get to this level … they tend to go directly for the nearest blonde?”

    This tendency may be more prominent due to a relative lack of interracial marriages among average blacks. Although a recent Pew poll showed that 94 percent of blacks say it’s all right for blacks and whites to date, a study published this year in Sociological Quarterly showed that blacks are less likely to actually date outside their race than are other groups.

    “There is a call for loyalty that is stronger in some ways than in other racial communities,” said the author of the study, George Yancey, a sociology professor at the University of North Texas and author of the book “Just Don’t Marry One.”

    The color of one’s companion has long been a major measure of “blackness” — which is a big reason why the biracial Barack Obama was able to fend off early questions about his black authenticity.

    “Had Barack had a white wife, I would have thought twice about voting for him,” Johnson Cooper said.

    So do Woods’ women say something about the intensely private golfer’s views on race?

    “I would like to say no, but I think it garners a bit of a yes,” Johnson Cooper said.

    Carmen Van Kerckhove, founder of the race-meets-pop-culture blog Racialicious, said there have been frequent discussions on her site about the fine line between preference and fetish.

    “Is there any difference between a white guy with a thing for blondes, and a non-white guy with a thing for blondes?” asked Van Kerckhove, who has a Chinese mother, a Belgian father and a husband born in America to parents from Benin.

    She claims that Asians don’t fully embrace Woods, either.

    “There are two layers of suspicion toward him,” Van Kerkhove said. “One toward the apparent pattern in the race of his partners, and the second in the way he sees himself. … People have been giving him the side-eye for a while.”

    There’s nothing wrong with wanting a mate who shares your culture, as long as it’s for the right reasons, the comedienne Sheryl Underwood said after unleashing a withering Woods monologue on Tom Joyner’s radio show.

    “Would we question when a Jewish person wants to marry other Jewish people?” she said in an interview. “It’s not racist. It’s not bigotry. It’s cultural pride.”

    “The issue comes in when you choose something white because you think it’s better,” Underwood said. “And then you never date a black woman or a woman of color or you never sample the greatness of the international buffet of human beings. If you never do that, we got a problem.”




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  • Tiger Woods Says He Has Transgressed

    Tiger Woods said he let his family down with transgressions he regrets “with all of my heart,” and that he will deal with his personal life behind closed doors.


    TIGERS MANGLED CADILLAC ESCALADE.  Picture © Getty Images

    His statement Wednesday follows a cover story in Us Weekly magazine that reports a Los Angeles cocktail waitress claims she had a 31-month affair with the world’s No. 1 golfer.

    “I have not been true to my values and the behavior my family deserves,” Woods said on his Web site . “I am not without faults and I am far short of perfect. I am dealing with my behavior and personal failings behind closed doors with my family. Those feelings should be shared by us alone.”

    The cocktail waitress, Jaimee Grubbs, told the magazine she met Woods at a Las Vegas nightclub the week after the 2007 Masters—two months before Woods’ wife, Elin, gave birth to their first child. Grubbs claims to have proof in 300 text messages.

    About three hours before Woods’ statement, the magazine published what it said was a voicemail—provided by Grubbs—that Woods left her phone on Nov. 24, three days before his middle-of-the-night car crash outside his home in Florida.

    Woods did not offer details of any alleged relationship.

    “I will strive to be a better person and the husband and father that my family deserves,” Woods said. “For all of those who have supported me over the years, I offer my profound apology.”

    Woods has been subjected to more media scrutiny over the last week than when he first won the Masters in 1997 and set off the first wave of Tigermania. He has spoken only three times through his Web site, although this was his longest posting.

    “Although I am a well-known person and have made my career as a professional athlete, I have been dismayed to realize the full extent of what tabloid scrutiny really means,” Woods said. “For the last week, my family and I have been hounded to expose intimate details of our personal lives.”

    And he continued to say accounts that physical violence played a role in his Friday morning car crash were “utterly false and malicious.”

    “Elin has always done more to support our family and shown more grace than anyone could possibly expect,” he wrote.

    His statement came one day after the Florida Highway Patrol closed its investigation into the accident—without Woods ever speaking to state troopers. He was charged with careless driving, which carries a $164 fine and four points on his driving record.

    The story soon shifted from a patrol investigation to sordid allegations into his personal life.

    In the voicemail released by the magazine, a man says to Grubbs:

    “Hey, it’s, uh, it’s Tiger. I need you to do me a huge favor. Um, can you please, uh, take your name off your phone. My wife went through my phone. And, uh, may be calling you. If you can, please take your name off that and, um, and what do you call it just have it as a number on the voicemail, just have it as your telephone number. That’s it, OK. You gotta do this for me. Huge. Quickly. All right. Bye.”

    The Associated Press could not confirm Woods was the caller.

     




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  • Tiger Woods Apology Changes Little

    The billion dollars didn’t help one cent.

    Tiger Woods couldn’t even get on his yacht “Privacy” and sail away somewhere to keep everyone from looking.

    Larger than life one day, just another sinner the next.

    No reason to talk about his quest to become the greatest golfer ever when the tabloids were offering up much juicier stuff for debate.

    Does anyone care about the odds of Woods winning the Grand Slam when one offshore sports book is posting odds on whether he will admit to having an affair by the end of the year? (Not admitting was a 2-1 favorite.)

    There has probably never been an athlete as celebrated as Woods. There has surely never been one who went from virtual deity to an overused punch line overnight.

    He could have tested positive for steroids and life would have gone on much as it did before, as Alex Rodriguez found out every time he was cheered at the plate.

    Begin having questions raised about your moral behavior, though, and things change. There are those who draw the line there, especially if they feel they’ve been misled by the carefully crafted image they had of Woods as a good family man and father.

    That’s why Woods came forward Wednesday with a statement he couldn’t have dreamed of making just a week ago. It came, as they all seem to do, from Woods’ official Web site, filed under the unlikely headline of “Tiger comments on current events.”

    If you had been in a remote cave the last week, you might have thought he was giving his take on the health care debate or the war in Afghanistan. Instead, he was offering up remorse and regret for his “transgressions.”

    “I have not been true to my values and the behavior my family deserves,” Woods said. “I am not without faults and I am far short of perfect.”

    Very far short, if you believe the claims of Jaimee Grubbs, who told Us Weekly magazine said she carried on a 31-month affair with Woods.

    If it’s true, perfect husbands don’t start hanging around in Las Vegas with a cocktail waitress two months before their wife is about to give birth to their first child. Perfect people don’t leave urgent voice mail messages like the one Woods allegedly left for Grubbs last week.

    Just what Woods did or didn’t do with Grubbs, or another woman the National Enquirer alleged was involved with him, likely will be good fodder on the Internet for some time. Woods, who spent more time addressing his right to privacy than his personal shortcomings in the statement, admitted to nothing other than letting his family down.

    Indeed, if only he had stayed in the house that night, there’s a good chance we wouldn’t have paid much attention.

    What was known even before the scandal broke was that Woods had a thing for all things Vegas, a town where fantasy eclipses reality and where the whims of the super rich and famous are famously tended to.

    “We heard stories and knew when he was in town,” said Norm Clarke, the gossip columnist for the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “What Vegas offered was a controlled environment to stay under the radar. You can sign people to confidentiality contracts but they still talk, especially in this town.”

    Loving life in Vegas isn’t a crime, of course. And so far the only thing Woods has done legally wrong is drive badly.

    But what happens when he returns to the golf course to play before large crowds? With the moral card now in play, will they—women, especially—still cheer everything he does?

    The early returns aren’t encouraging. While Tiger was once the gold standard among all athletes, there are signs that the media frenzy is taking a toll.

    Zeta Interactive, which measures Internet buzz on various topics, says the tone of postings on Woods went from being 91 percent positive and 9 percent negative before the accident to 74 percent positive and 26 percent negative afterward.

    That’s not enough to cost Woods any of his big-name sponsors. Barring more allegations, it’s probably not even enough for Phil Mickelson to steal many of his fans.

    More intriguing, meanwhile, is whether Woods will be the same player when he returns.

    Will the famous Tiger glare and fist pump still be enough to intimidate opponents when they’ve seen his most vulnerable side? Will he be able to maintain his equally famous powers of concentration when the talk about him isn’t all about golf and the paparazzi still tail him home every night?

    Woods may already be asking himself the same questions. He’s always been able to deal with distractions, but he’s never had one like this.

    Yes, it’s hard to imagine. But in the end, his greatness could become the biggest casualty of all.




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  • Jesper Parnevik Feeling Guilty Over Tiger Woods Behavior

    Jesper Parnevik, who introduced Tiger Woods to his future wife Elin Nordegren eight years ago, said on Wednesday he owed an apology to his fellow Swede and former nanny.


    HOT GOSSIP!  Picture © Getty Images

    World number one Woods, who has had two children with Nordegren since their marriage in 2004, issued his own apology earlier on Wednesday for “transgressions” that apparently addressed allegations he had extra-marital relationships.

    “I am very sad of course,” Parnevik told the Golf Channel. “I really feel sorry for Elin since me and my wife were at fault for hooking her up with him.”

    Nordegren was working as nanny to the children of Parnevik and his wife Mia when she first met Woods during the 2001 British Open at Royal Lytham in England.

    “We probably thought he was a better guy than he is then,” added the 44-year-old Swede, a five-times winner on the PGA Tour.

    “I would probably need to apologise to her (Elin).”

    Woods mysteriously crashed into a fire hydrant and a tree while pulling out of the driveway of his home in Windermere, Florida last Friday and Nordegren used a golf club to smash a window of the car to get him out.

    Woods, the greatest player of his generation and perhaps of all time, has since been engulfed in speculation over his private life following media reports that he and his wife had argued before the crash.

    “It’s a private thing, of course,” said Parnevik, who was speaking at this week’s PGA Tour qualifying tournament at Bear Lakes Country Club in Florida.

    “But when you are the guy he is, the world’s best athlete, you should think more before you do stuff and maybe not ‘Just do it,’ like Nike says.”

    One of the world’s most recognisable figures with a squeaky clean, hard-working image, Woods has lucrative endorsement deals with major companies such as Nike , AT&T , and Gillette, a unit of Procter & Gamble.




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  • Sponsors Standing by Tiger Woods

    Longtime sponsors are sticking with Tiger Woods—for now.

    But the world’s most famous athlete, who offered a “profound apology” Wednesday following allegations of infidelity, might find new deals hard to come by, marketing experts say, and the loyalty of existing sponsors could be tested by any additional tawdry stories or his reluctance to address the issue publicly.

    “Unfortunately for Tiger, the situation is not over,” said Bob Williams, CEO of Burns Entertainment and Sports Marketing, which represents companies looking to hire celebrities to sell their brands.

    “The linchpin will be when he addresses the public for the first time,” Williams said, adding that will help companies determine how they feel about him.

    Woods’ apology came in a statement on his Web site, after a cover story in Us Weekly magazine reported that a Los Angeles cocktail waitress claimed to have had a 31-month affair with the world’s No. 1 golfer. The magazine also published what it said was a voice mail—provided by the waitress, Jaimee Grubbs—that Woods left on her phone on Nov. 24, three days before his middle-of-the-night car crash outside his Florida home.

    Woods did not offer details of any alleged relationships but said he had “not been true to my values and the behavior my family deserves.”

    Forbes estimated earlier this year that Woods was the first athlete to surpass $1 billion in career earnings, more than 80 percent of that coming from endorsements with companies such as Nike, Gillette, Gatorade and AT&T. Those are all long-term relationships, Octagon First Call’s David Schwab said, partners not likely to dump him at the first rough patch.

    Nike, Gatorade and EA Sports all released statements Wednesday expressing their support or commitment to Woods, and Gillette said it had no plans to change its marketing programs. AT&T declined comment.

    “These are people who are invested with him in his foundation, his golf courses, across the board. So they’re part of his family, too,” said Schwab, who also links companies and celebrities for branding opportunities.

    In fact, cutting ties with Woods now could actually hurt a company, Schwab said.

    “Brands look at how impactful a spokesperson can be for their for brand but also what the public outcry or public opinion would be,” he said. “If a brand drops him, there could potentially be negativity toward the brand for doing so.

    “That’s why brands typically weather the storm.”

    But companies that may have wanted to align themselves with Woods might rethink that—particularly companies whose target audience is women or children. Part of Woods’ appeal has been his pristine image, off the course as well as on, and events of the last week have tainted that, making him an easy target.

    Jay Leno poked fun at Woods during his show Tuesday night. Spirit Airlines is trying to capitalize on his troubles, too, offering an “eye of the tiger” sale, which they’re promoting with a video that shows a tiger in a baseball cap driving an SUV into a fire hydrant.

    Zeta Interactive’s “Zeta Buzz” mines more than 100 million blogs, message boards and social media posts to analyze the feelings of potential consumers. In the past, terms most associated with Woods were “Masters,” “golf” and “winning,” Zeta CEO Al DiGuido said. In the last week, that’s changed to “affair” and “cheat,” DiGuido said.

    The tone of posts has also changed, he said. Before the car crash, 91 percent were positive. That’s now down to 74 percent. The volume also has skyrocketed. Zeta Buzz found 900 posts related to Woods on Tuesday; from midnight to noon Wednesday, there were 2,000, DiGuido said.

    “As much as he wants to put this behind him, what’s happening now is the alleged scandal is starting to fuel the buzz, and it’s not positive for Tiger Woods,” DiGuido said. “The volume is continuing to grow and the negative side of it is getting more intense.

    “It would be something that (if you’re a sponsor) you would watch pretty closely because it starts to take on a life of its own.”

    It’s not just Woods who stands to lose. The Tiger Woods Foundation provides educational resources to disadvantaged children, with a $25 million learning center in Anaheim, Calif., and plans to build another in Washington, D.C.

    “With respect to the sponsors and partners, they’ve shown a tremendous amount of support in us and this event, and they’ve been supportive of the foundation and they’ve been proud of the work we’ve done the past 13 years with more than 10 million kids,” Greg McLaughlin, foundation president and tournament director for Woods’ Chevron World Challenge, said this week.

    “A lot of kids need our help and want our help, and we’re going to continue to grow our foundation and provide valuable services to these kids,” he said.

    Woods, who backed out of the tournament after the accident, again pleaded for privacy in his statement Wednesday, saying “problems within a family shouldn’t have to mean public confessions.” But that’s not going to be good enough, the marketing experts said.

    Questions will continue to be asked until Woods himself answers them, they said. And the longer he goes without facing the public, the more fans and consumers will question the faith they had in him.

    “Sponsors are going to listen to the people who buy their products,” said Michael Gordon, CEO of Group Gordon Strategic Communications in New York. “If he handles it well, and he still has the opportunity to do that, he can put this to bed. Currently, the way he’s handling it is failing.

    “The language in the statement is perfect,” Gordon added. “But he needs to come out and humanize it and say those words and answer a handful of tough questions on the subject. The more he avoids direct media contact, he creates more scrutiny of the situation.”




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  • 66 Pro Tour Enjoys a Successful First Year in 2009

    A new professional golf tour made an impact in the south this year. The 66 Pro Tour was well received by the players, providing a great opportunity to play for substantial prize money at some high quality venues.
    Players who supported the tour this year included Ronan Rafferty, Gary Emerson, Zane Scotland, Paul Way and Raymond Russell.  The tour directors wish to thank all the supporters of the tour this season and look forward to an exciting 2010.

    Final Event at Prince’s
    The 66 Pro Tour Final was held at Prince’s Golf Club in Sandwich, Kent on 10th November 2009 and the results have been posted on the website.  Daniel Brooks [Mill Hill] fired a sensational seven under par 65 to win the final event of 2009 at the famous Prince’s links, along with the £3,000 cheque and a prize from new clothing brand Ukko.  Francis McGuirk, the local favourite, shot a superb 66 and there were excellent performances from Richard Edginton [Effingham ] and former European Tour winner Raymond Russell on 67.
    A high quality field made the most of the unusually benign conditions, which saw over twenty five players break par. The 66 Pro Tour is now an established arena for aspiring and experienced players, which offers high quality events with good prize money, staged at some of England’s finest venues.  2010 will see the tour expand into more areas with its exciting one day format.




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