(AP) - They mocked him mercilessly for four solid months and delighted
in every sordid detail of his fall from grace.
Now it's Tiger Woods' turn.
"After a long and necessary time away from the game," Woods said
in a statement Tuesday, "I feel like I'm ready to start my season
at Augusta."
Don't bet against him winning the Masters, or for that matter,
dozens of times after that. The bookies won't, since the
London-based firm William Hill just installed Woods as the 4-1
favorite and lists him at 25-1 to win all four majors this
year.
Woods might have done that, anyway, whether the sex scandal that
sidelined him eventually became public or not. Keep in mind that if
even half the stories of his extramarital flings are true, he won a
dozen times around the world knowing full well that secret could
blow up at any moment.
Whether Woods is a changed man away from the course is something
only his family and closest friends will be able to answer. But
knowing as much — or as little, it turns out — as I do
after covering Woods since he was 15, one thing is certain: The
self-righteous, self-promoting and self-appointed experts offering
opinions and-or advice have provided him with enough motivation to
last the rest of his golfing life.
It's not as though Woods needed any more, or even that winning
again would somehow scrub off the stain of serial adultery.
No matter how he fares at Augusta and beyond, whether he returns
in some fan-friendly incarnation or as the same steely-eyed
predator, Woods will always be reminded of those sins. The sponsors
who walked away from him may never come back. He knows that.
But winning will restore a measure of control over the narrative
in a way that months of relative silence have failed to accomplish.
It will also deny all those haters any more satisfaction at his
expense. And if you think he burned white-hot to win before, just
wait.
We used to make a big deal of the story about a young Tiger
taping a list of Jack Nicklaus' accomplishments to his bedroom
wall, and the single-minded devotion Woods invested to beat
Nicklaus to every one. Next we speculated about whether losing his
father or starting a family would detour or eventually derail that
pursuit. Then, as the last milestone on Jack's list — 18
career majors — came into view, we wondered whether Woods
could be as tenacious as Nicklaus and for as long.
The guys he will have to do it against have few doubts.
"He's not going to be a whole lot easier to beat because of what
happened off the golf course," Stewart Cink said.
Echoed Jerry Kelly: "He may come back and say, 'You think this
is going to bother me that bad? Maybe it is. but watch what I can
do.'"
Either way, we're about to find out. The one thing no one ever
questioned about Woods was his ruthlessness. Every fan in his
gallery and every guy who played alongside him came away with a
story about how cold-blooded Woods could be in moments big and
small. Turns out all of those versions sold him short.
What we've learned in the intervening months is that Woods was
willing to risk anything and everything to get what he wants. And
no matter what else remains at the top of his list, winning isn't
going anywhere. That was apparent, first by his unwillingness to
bend to other people's expectations and apologize, and then, once
Woods got it through his stubborn skull that wouldn't work, by
reversing course. He went to rehab. He went on camera. He said he
was sorry.
That wasn't enough for some people and won't ever be enough for
others. Yet the only ones Woods harmed were his wife and those
closest to him, and he'll be paying that debt forever.
Winning golf tournaments won't even any of those scores, let
alone all of them. But it's as good a way as any to prove that for
all the things that might be different about Woods, one thing will
never change.