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Is it time for Tiger Woods to retire? Latest setback makes the answer clearer

Is it time for Tiger Woods to retire? Latest setback makes the answer clearer

USA Today11-03-2025
Is it time for Tiger Woods to retire? Latest setback makes the answer clearer
As I began to ramp up my own training and practice at home, I felt a sharp pain in my left Achilles, which was deemed to be ruptured.
This morning, Dr. Charlton Stucken of Hospital for Special Surgery in West Palm Beach, Florida performed a minimally-invasive Achilles tendon… pic.twitter.com/KAVZfcRxlE — Tiger Woods (@TigerWoods) March 11, 2025
Tiger Woods is probably never going to retire on his own terms.
Generationally great athletes like him rarely know when, let alone how, to walk away. When you've been at the mountaintop for so long, when you've trained yourself to turn every doubt into fuel, when you've won again and again against all odds, why wouldn't you think this can last forever?
Like Tom Brady, Michael Jordan and many GOATs before them, Tiger's brain was never going to accept that it was time to hang it up. Only his body could do that. This week, his body sent him the clearest signal yet: A ruptured Achilles tendon that ended his latest comeback bid before it could even begin.
Woods announced the injury, and subsequent surgery, on Tuesday — just as the world's best golfers were congregating for THE PLAYERS at TPC Sawgrass, where Tiger has won twice and created countless more memories for his fans.
Tiger Woods injury history: Recent ailments including a torn Achilles
Given what we know about his injury history and what it takes to come back from a torn Achilles, that's probably a wrap on the competitive career of Eldrick Woods.
The last time we saw Woods in either a PGA Tour or major tournament was when he missed The Open cut at Royal Troon last July. He'll have turned 50 by the time the next PGA season starts. Only four golfers over that age remain on Tour, and that's assuming he's recovered enough to play next March. Even the otherwise healthiest individuals still need a full calendar year to come back from such a grueling rehab.
In Woods' case, this is seventh known surgery he's required in the last 10 years. September saw Woods undergo microdecompression surgery on the lumbar spine to relieve pain in his lower back. He was hoping to make it back in time for THE PLAYERS and even teed it up on Monday this week at the famed Seminole Pro-Member tournament with a few other Tour stalwarts.
That was after Woods admitted it'd been hard getting back into the game following the passing of his mother, Kultida.
"I haven't really gotten into it," Woods told reporters. "My heart is not really into practicing right now. I've had so many other things to do with the tour and trying to do other things."
Maybe he proves everyone wrong one last time. Maybe golf fans of a certain age need to hold onto that hope. But that's all it is at this point. Hope that one day we'll see Woods perform another miracle with a golf ball.
Between the injuries, the mental strain of losing someone so close to his heart and career and, of course, Woods' refusal to use a golf cart even with an exemption, everything is adding up the inevitable. Woods will still enjoy the spotlight because he's still Tiger Woods. He can still play in his TGL league. He can still help the PGA navigate the incredibly rough terrain amid a merger with LIV. He just can't hold up to the rigors of playing on the PGA Tour anymore.
It's time to hang it up, Tiger.
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Scheffler rallies to win BMW for 5th PGA Tour victory of year. Rahm takes LIV points title
Scheffler rallies to win BMW for 5th PGA Tour victory of year. Rahm takes LIV points title

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Scheffler rallies to win BMW for 5th PGA Tour victory of year. Rahm takes LIV points title

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Scottie Scheffler erased a four-shot deficit in five holes and then delivered a haymaker on the daunting par-3 17th by chipping in from 82 feet for birdie that carried him to victory Sunday in the BMW Championship for his fifth PGA Tour title of the year. Scheffler closed with a 3-under 67 for a two-shot victory and became the first player since Tiger Woods (2006-07) to win at least five times on the PGA Tour in consecutive years. Robert MacIntyre didn't make a birdie until the 16th hole but stayed in the game after losing his big lead, mostly when Scheffler began missing short putts. MacIntyre pulled within one shot of the lead going to the 17th, the toughest hole at Caves Valley, with a back right pin on a crispy green that sloped to the right toward the water. Scheffler went just left in the rough, the ball sitting up nicely but the shot still scary. 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Scheffler rallies to win BMW for 5th PGA Tour victory of year. Rahm takes LIV points title
Scheffler rallies to win BMW for 5th PGA Tour victory of year. Rahm takes LIV points title

San Francisco Chronicle​

time26 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Scheffler rallies to win BMW for 5th PGA Tour victory of year. Rahm takes LIV points title

OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Scottie Scheffler erased a four-shot deficit in five holes and then delivered a haymaker on the daunting par-3 17th by chipping in from 82 feet for birdie that carried him to victory Sunday in the BMW Championship for his fifth PGA Tour title of the year. Scheffler closed with a 3-under 67 for a two-shot victory and became the first player since Tiger Woods (2006-07) to win at least five times on the PGA Tour in consecutive years. Robert MacIntyre didn't make a birdie until the 16th hole but stayed in the game after losing his big lead, mostly when Scheffler began missing short putts. MacIntyre pulled within one shot of the lead going to the 17th, the toughest hole at Caves Valley, with a back right pin on a crispy green that sloped to the right toward the water. Scheffler went just left in the rough, the ball sitting up nicely but the shot still scary. He landed it some 60 feet short and watched it trickle, and then roll, and then slow again until it dropped into the cup. MacIntyre could only look at him and stare at the world's No. 1 player making other-worldly shots in another extraordinary season. MacIntyre, who made 18 birdies in the first 45 holes of the tournament, made only two over the last 27 holes. He shot 73. It's not over for Scheffler, who leads the 30 players who advanced to the Tour Championship at East Lake with a chance to become the first repeat FedEx Cup champion since the series began in 2007. All 30 players at East Lake can win the $10 million first-place check. LIV Golf League WESTFIELD, Ind. (AP) — Jon Rahm successfully defended his LIV Golf season points title without winning an event all year, closing with an 11-under 60 before losing a playoff to Sebastian Munoz on the first extra hole in the Indianapolis event. Munoz won two days after becoming the first player to shoot 59 with a double bogey. 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The 23-year-old Japanese player broke through in her first season on the LPGA Tour after winning six times on the JLPGA Tour. She had second-place finishes in Thailand in February and Los Angeles in April, then watched her sister win at Mayakoba in May in Mexico. On Sunday, Chisato Iwai shot a 64 to tie for third, five strokes back. The winner finished at 24-under 264 on the tree-lined course. She opened with consecutive 67s, then shot a 64 on Saturday to take a two-stroke lead into the final round. American Gurleen Kaur was a career-best second, closing with a 65. Amateur Kiara Romero shot a 64 to tie for seventh at 16 under in her first tour start. The University of Oregon player won the 2023 U.S. Girls' Junior and 2025 Big Ten title. European Tour COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Marco Penge of England tapped in for birdie at the 18th hole for a 4-under 67 to win the Danish Golf Championship by one shot over Rasmus Hojgaard, who missed a chance to climb into the automatic qualifying position for the Ryder Cup. Hojgaard looked on course for the title in his home country when he powered into a four-shot lead midway through his front nine, only to drop four strokes in four holes from No. 10 and allow Penge to take the lead. Trailing by two on the par-5 closing hole at Furesø Golf Klub, Hojgaard made a 10-foot eagle. Penge missed the green to the left, chipped to 3 feet and made the birdie putt for his second European tour title this year. Hojgaard (69) was the runner-up and will remain outside the six automatic qualifying spots, just behind No. 6 Sepp Straka, in the race to get into Europe's team. Qualifying ends next week at the British Masters. PGA Tour Champions CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Richard Green of Australia won the Rogers Charity Classic for his first PGA Tour Champions title, birdieing the par-5 18th hole for a 5-under 65 and a one-stroke victory. Green held off Ricardo Gonzalez, the Argentine player who birdied the final two holes at Canyon Meadows for a 65 of his own. The 54-year-old Green won in his 91st start on the 50-and-over tour. He finished at 18-under 192 after opening with rounds of 65 and 62. Charles Schwab Cup leader Miguel Angel Jimenez of Spain, the second-round leader after consecutive rounds of 63, had a 68 to finish third at 16 under. He leads the tour with four victories this season. Korn Ferry Tour BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Emilio Gonzalez of Mexico won the Albertsons Boise Open for his first Korn Ferry Tour title and PGA Tour next season, shooting a 10-under 61 for a one-stroke victory over Jeffrey Kang. Gonzalez jumped to fourth on the Korn Ferry Tour points list to wrap up the PGA Tour card. He finished at 22-under 262 at Hillcrest Country Club, playing a late three-hole stretch in 4 under with a birdie on the par-4 15th, an eagle on the par-5 16th and a birdie on the par-3 17th. Kang birdied two of the last three in a 65. Other tours Erika Hara of Japan won the Wildhorse Ladies Golf Classic in Pendleton, Oregon, for her Epson Tour title. Hara closed with an 8-under 64 to finish at 18 under for a three-stroke margin. She won the Japan Women's Open in 2020 and 2023. ... Kazuki Higa closed with a 7-under 65 and won the ISPS Handa Explosion in the Summer with an eagle on the second playoff hole to defeat Ren Yonezawa, who shot 64. Higa won for the first time in three years and now has seven titles on the Japan Golf Tour. ... David Law closed with a 4-under 68 for a two-shot victory in the Vierumaki Finnish Challenge, his second win of the season on Europe's Challenge Tour. The victory move him to the top of the points list. ... Cory Crawford shot 7-under 65 and won by two shots at the PNG Open on the PGA Tour of Australasia. ... Herman Loubser closed with a 3-under 69 and defeated Yurav Premlall in the Vodacom Origins of Golf on the Sunshine Tour. ... Asuka Kashiwabara closed with a 4-under 68 for a one-shot victory over Sayaka Teraoka in the NEC Karuizawa 72 on the Japan LPGA. ... Jungmin Hong shot 7-under 65 to complete a nine-shot victory in the Mediheal Hankookilbo Championship on the Korea LPGA.

Scottie Scheffler holes insane 82-foot chip shot to save comeback win at BMW Championship
Scottie Scheffler holes insane 82-foot chip shot to save comeback win at BMW Championship

New York Post

time26 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Scottie Scheffler holes insane 82-foot chip shot to save comeback win at BMW Championship

Scottie Scheffler's shot looked like one that Hollywood would have concocted for a movie. But the wild 82-foot chip shot for birdie on the 17th hole Sunday during the final round of the BMW Championship was not the result of a scripted moment, and it helped propel Scheffler to his fifth PGA Tour title of the year. Scheffler had hit a shot that went left of the green and landed in the rough, setting up the impressive moment right after at Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills, Md. 4 Scottie Scheffler of the United States chips for birdie on the 17th green during the final round of the BMW Championship 2025 at Caves Valley Golf Club on August 17, 2025. Getty Images He chipped the ball short of the pin and then watched as it rolled without any sign of stopping before falling into the cup. It came at a crucial time with Robert MacIntyre pulling within one shot of the lead going into the 17th hole. 'It looked good when it landed, looked good when it was rolling, and it was nice to see that one go in,' Scheffler said about the shot. Scheffler (15-under) closed with a 3-under 67 for a two-shot victory after starting the day trailing MacIntyre by four shots. The moment on 17th hole certainly had golf fans captivated as they watched the shot go in and even NFL star Patrick Mahomes was left shocked. 'Scottie is crazy man,' he wrote on X with five crying laughing emojis. 4 Scottie Scheffler of the United States reacts to his birdie putt on the 17th green during the final round of the BMW Championship 2025 at Caves Valley Golf Club on August 17, 2025. Getty Images Another sports icon also chimed in via social media. 'Scheffler so damn COLD out there!!' NBA superstar LeBron James wrote on x. 'Crazy ZONE he's in currently!' James added in another post. 4 Scottie Scheffler of the United States reacts to his birdie putt on the 17th green during the final round of the BMW Championship 2025 at Caves Valley Golf Club on August 17, 2025 in Owings Mills, Maryland. Getty Images 4 Scottie Scheffler of the United States poses with the Western Golf Association (WGA) Open J.K. Wadley Championship Cup trophy and the tournament trophy after the final round of the BMW Championship 2025 at Caves Valley Golf Club on August 17, 2025. Getty Images 'That was insane Scottie Scheffler,' Knicks star Josh Hart commented on X. Scheffler, a four-time major winner, has now won 12 PGA Tour events over the last two years and a gold medal at the Olympics last summer, and he is the first golfer since Tiger Woods to win five or more events during a PGA Tour season in consecutive years.

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