AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — The circus is largely gone and so, mostly, are the questions about his personal life. Tiger Woods returned to the Masters this week without feeling the urge to apologize for anything, even the poor state of his game.
A year ago, the chairman of Augusta National
lectured him about his conduct and what it meant to the game of golf. On
Tuesday, he was welcomed back to his 17th Masters as a four-time champion who
means so much to golf.
A lot has changed for Woods in the year since he
emerged from self-imposed exile following his sex scandal. What hasn't changed
is that some of his play has been almost as embarrassing as the revelations
about his personal life.
The man who once wowed fans with booming drives and
precision irons now struggles to keep up with his playing partners. The player
who never used to miss a 6-footer now can only shake his head as the putts
don't come near the hole.
Woods says it's nothing more than finding his way
through a new swing change. Others who know something about human failings
believe it may go a lot deeper than fairways and greens.
"He's got experience coming back from
technical problems, but he doesn't have experience coming back from
shame," said Sharon Chirban, a Harvard sports psychologist who coaches athletes
in her private practice. "Until the shame is managed, he will never come
back to the level of play he had before."
Just what is going on in Woods' private life is
mostly a matter of conjecture, though some things are obviously different since
he surprised many by finishing fourth at the Masters last year in his first
tournament since the scandal. He's divorced now with two young children and is
preparing to move into a new mansion — complete with a short game course — near
where his ex-wife recently bought a new home herself.
What is going on in his golf game seems just as
murky, though Woods insisted again Tuesday that his only problems are refining
his new swing and figuring out a way to make more putts. It's been his stock
answer since he came out of seclusion here last year amid a circus that
included planes flying overhead carrying banners taunting him, tabloids
stalking him, and so many reporters wanting to ask him questions that tickets
had to be issued for his pre-tournament press conference.
Woods resisted efforts to link his personal life
with his bad golf, deflecting questions with the ease he used to hit his
driver.
Is he in a better place this year?
He said he felt "almost ready to tee it up
Thursday."
Has he grown personally even while struggling with
family and golf issues?
He barely budged. "As far as being a better
person, I try to do that each and every day," Woods said. "That will
and always will be the case."
Famously controlling even before the scandal, Woods
signaled early in his comeback he has no intention of answering anything that
doesn't have to do with golf or the state of his game.
That leaves others to speculate, and there's no
lack of theories about what is wrong. Amateur psychologists debating the issue
in bars might think it's as simple as a loss of confidence in his swing or the
lack of a steady female companion, but the professionals have other ideas.
"This has nothing to with his swing,"
Chirban said. "He's an emotional work in progress and the strategies he's used
before are not going to fix his failings now. You fix it by continuing to work
on understanding what led him to the behavior that caused shame and that's an
ongoing process."
Woods spent weeks in a rehab center in Mississippi
following the accident that exposed his life of kinky sex with a string of
mistresses, ostensibly to deal with issues of sex addiction. But experts say
even intensive therapy can't solve deep-rooted emotional issues immediately,
and it isn't known whether Woods continues to work with therapists as he
continues to work on his game.
Woods faces the added burden of having to do that
while on public display, at least for the six hours or so a day he is on the
golf course. Fans have for the most part been respectful, though at the U.S.
Open last year one yelled at Woods that his private life was the public's
business because Woods himself had made it the public's business.
But while Woods tries to rationalize things by
focusing on his swing as the root of all his problems, there is no doubt his
issues run deep in the game he once dominated.
No. 1 in the world for 90 percent of his career,
he's now seventh and fading fast. The Masters starts Thursday and, while he's
still one of the betting favorites, those odds are based on memories from
another time.
Fellow competitor Ian Poulter said Monday he
doubted Woods would be able to finish in the top five this week, much less win,
a comment that Woods didn't take particularly well.
"Well, Poulter is always right, isn't
he?" Woods said sarcastically.
Still, players who once used to fear him now offer
him consoling words as he finishes off another bad round. Fans who once
screamed his name and roared at his shots now offer little but sympathetic
applause.
He seems confused. He appears lost.
"He fell back to earth and not only do the
other players see him as human now, but he sees himself subconsciously as
human," said Gregg Steinberg, a professor of sports psychology at Austin
Peay State University who has worked with pro golfers. "Before he almost
saw himself as superhuman but he's had a lot of emotional distress in his life
that has changed that. In a way, he's suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder
in the way he can't control his emotions — and he was a genius in controlling
his emotions."
Just how much that plays into a wayward drive into
the trees or a three-putt at a critical moment only Woods knows — though most
experts say he is probably in denial about it. But almost every top player has
his own psychologist at tournaments trying to get him to clear his mind and
concentrate on the moment, and for Woods that task is magnified by the issues
he has faced.
And while there were recent reports — labeled as
unfounded by those close to Woods — that he had a new girlfriend, having
someone new may not be the path Woods wants to go down right now.
"Being a sex addict means you need to be sober
from sex," Bacchus said. "Having a relationship now may not be a good
idea."
What would be a good idea for Woods is winning
again, and the Masters is a tournament he feels he can win every time he tees
it up. He blew away the field winning here by 12 strokes in 1997 for his first
major title, and adding another green jacket this week would not only make a
statement that he's back but give a badly needed boost to one of the greatest
players ever.
The same people who say he has a long recovery
ahead also say not to sell him short. This is Tiger Woods, after all, who for
years was probably the most mentally focused athlete around.
"Will he come back? Probably, but it takes
time from this hugely traumatic situation," Steinberg said. "My guess
is that he is going to win some more tournaments, perhaps quite a few
more."
Woods himself said Tuesday he believes he will
still win at least five more majors to break the record of 18 held by Jack
Nicklaus. The world, Woods insisted, has not seen the best of him yet.
Hard to believe, considering how great Woods once
was. Then again, it's hard to figure out what to believe about Woods anymore.
Copyright
2011 The Associated Press.
(AP
Photo/Dave Martin)






