Tuesday, August 29, 2000
Woods runs out of magic
By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Writer
Here's what makes Tiger Woods worth watching, even in a made-for-TV
event against a guy he beats most nights in his sleep:
Woods has become the best show not just in sports, but all of
TV. You take your eyes off him, even for a minute, and you risk
missing something no one's ever done before.
Fighting fatigue and the flu, Woods ran out of magic Monday night
in the Battle of Bighorn, losing to Sergio Garcia
1-up. The 20-year-old Spaniard birdied four of the last five holes,
including two long birdie putts ripped out of the pages of Woods'
playbook.
At least, said Woods, I gave him a run for his
money.
More important was what Woods gave golf for the last week or so.
This past Saturday, he was walking up the 18th fairway with Phil
Mickelson and lapping the field again. It wasn't a major. Bob
May, who chased Woods to the wire in the last of the season's
big four tournaments, has taken his slingshot to another PGA Tour
event halfway across the country.
So only golf junkies were supposed to be watching the final minutes
of the telecast from the NEC Invitational in Akron, Ohio. And
Mickelson had just given them a jolt by wielding his 8-iron like
a scythe to cut the ball out of the rough and land it just short
of the 18th green.
Then Woods took his turn.
What followed had the CBS announcers in the fairway and the tower
stepping on each other's lines. The result sounded like something
straight out of Carl the deranged greenskeeper's Cinderella
Boy monologue from Caddyshack. Only this was
on live TV.
Tiger's in really, really nasty rough ... he's got 184 yards
to the pin ... pitching wedge (!) ... to 8 feet (!!!) .
After one of the most remarkable shots ever, Woods missed the
birdie putt. And still shot 67.
Then Sunday comes, he plays a few holes, wolfs down a cheeseburger
during a rain delay, rifles his last shot through near-darkness
to two feet, and shoots another 67. He wins, he breaks another
scoring record and makes another acceptance speech. The only difference
between this Sunday and last is he doesn't get to sleep in his
own bed.
Monday morning, Woods wakes up in Akron, appears at a clinic for
one of his sponsors, then hops on his private jet. What awaits
him at the end of a journey to Palm Desert, Calif., is yet another
of those well-paying exhibitions golf pros use to make ends meet.
Woods being Woods, this one has a title, Battle of Bighorn,
and it will pay him considerably more $1.1 million
than most exhibitions. And instead of playing in a foursome with
the usual corporate chieftains, Woods has to play mano a mano
with Sergio Garcia.
The best thing to be said about Battle of Bighorn
is, it sounded like a good idea at the time. When ABC cleared
space in prime time and cut the deal last spring, Woods was just
coming off a streak of six straight wins and Garcia was still
his most attractive rival. Of course, back then the young Spaniard
still had game and Woods still had rivals.
So maybe the only suspense left is what kind of ratings Bighorn
draws. But what else are you going to watch?
Big Brother on CBS? Mysterious Ways on
NBC? Nitro on TNT? Padres at Cubs?
Watching Woods instead gives you the best they have to offer,
anyway. What he gives up in drama, he more than gives back in
honest showmanship.
Ali was like that, but TV was just getting started then. Michael
Jordan was like that, too. There were dozens of nights in February
when his team was resting comfortably atop the standings and Jordan
was far enough ahead in the scoring race to take a night off.
But he never did.
He understood that to make the biggest shots at the biggest moments,
he had to make them at the smaller ones, too.
Woods is like that. Only he's delivering those moments in such
a compressed time frame that anybody who blinks risks missing
something. It's why the networks stopped taking chances, why Time
magazine put him on the cover the week of the Republican convention.
Only four years ago, Woods was playing in the final group of another
golf tournament that also ended Sunday. That was the U.S. Amateur.
He's raised his game several levels since, but the competition
looks the same. The problem is that the guys with enough talent
to challenge Woods don't have the heart, and vice versa. No one
is willing to outwork him.
En route to a 61 on Friday that sent shivers down the spine of
everybody who has to play him, Woods walked off the 15th tee and
into a clearing. He found a gap in the tree line and stood there
transfixed, staring off in the distance at a TV tower with a cloth
hanging off it like the tail of a kite. He was intent on gauging
a breeze almost no one else felt. Only then did he step back on
the tee and hit his drive.
That's what his competition is up against. A friend who should
have copyrighted the idea said the Battle at Bighorn
would have been more interesting if Woods played against a different
pro at each hole. Someday soon. Or if Garcia proves as good at
impersonating his fellow pros as Peter Jacobsen, maybe sooner.
Regardless, PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem stayed tuned because
he has plenty at stake. Finchem is about to open negotiations
on a new TV contract. At the moment, he likes his position.
If he does this six or eight times a year for the next five
years, at some point do people get bored? Finchem said.
Maybe. That's not the case right now.
Jim Litke is the national sports columnist for The Associated
Press. Write to him at jlitkeap.org
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