“It’s not as limber and as loose as it normally is, that’s for sure,” he said.
But Woods, 46, knows that he is being watched closely. While he has not always wanted to live his life in the spotlight as a role model, he is not shying away from that turn this week. Asked what he hoped to show sports fans at this year’s Masters, he replied: “Never give up. Always chase after your dreams. And I fight each and every day. Each and every day is a challenge. Each and every day presents its own different challenges for all of us. I wake up and start the fight all over again.”
Woods’s troubles on Saturday began after he had played reasonably well during his first four holes, which ended in two pars, a bogey and a birdie. But on the fifth hole, he grimaced conspicuously after hitting a middle iron shot from 192 yards. His ball settled 65 feet from the hole, a distance Woods struggled to negotiate in a stunning four putts, including a third putt from four feet away that made nearly an entire revolution around the hole before spinning out. There was another three-putt on the ninth hole, which was set up by a poor approach shot that left Woods’s ball 60 feet uphill from the hole.
Woods had recovered with back-to-back birdies on the 12th and 13th holes and two routine pars on the succeeding holes. But three more off-target approach shots led to the two bogeys and a double bogey on his three closing holes — and nine more putts.
“It’s just like I hit a thousand putts out there on the greens today,” said Woods, who spent part of his post-round time grinning sardonically at his misfortunes. “I was trying different things, trying to find it, trying to get something. And nothing seemed to work.”