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After holding a spot for “TBD tournament exemption” when the initial field list was released for the Hero World Challenge, Tiger Woods has filled that slot with his own name.
Woods announced Saturday he will make a return to competitive golf for the first time since April at his own charity tournament at the end of the month in the Bahamas.
Wait? Haven’t we seen this before?
Woods made the same moves last year, holding his spot in the elite 20-man field, then committing to the event, before withdrawing Monday of tournament week because of plantar fasciitis. Hopefully for him, he does not repeat the third step in that process.
He was onsite at Albany Golf Club last December but then made just his fourth PGA Tour start since 2020 two months later at the Genesis Invitational, which he hosts. At the Genesis, Woods made the cut and completed all 72 holes for just the second time since making an initial return from a devastating February 2021 single-car crash in which he sustained severe injuries to his right leg and foot.
Woods made one more start in 2023 at the Masters. However, Woods withdrew midway through the third round at Augusta citing his injured right leg.
A few days later, he underwent a subtalar fusion procedure to alleviate pain from an arthritic condition that developed after his previous surgeries.
Since the latest surgery, Woods has had just a handful of public appearances and even fewer where he was seen hitting golf balls. However, on the day of the announcement of his TGL franchise name and ownership, part of the semi-virtual golf league he and Rory McIlroy are backing, he told the Associated Press’ Doug Ferguson his surgically repaired ankle was pain-free.
“My ankle is fine,” Woods told the AP. “Where they fused my ankle, I have absolutely zero issue whatsoever. That pain is completely gone. It’s the other areas that have been compensated for.”
That was just over a week ago when rumblings were already circling the golf world about his impending return. Speaking to Golf Channel, Stewart Cink said the two spoke at the World Wide Technology Championship and Woods said he was in “go-mode.”
Cameras also caught pictures and videos of Woods caddying for his son Charlie in junior tournaments. Woods walked 54 holes during one of the tournaments, which is notable because Woods has been adamant about not wanting to use a cart to play in tournaments with other PGA Tour pros.
However, he has used one the past two seasons playing with Charlie at the PNC Championship. That tournament is sanctioned by the PGA Tour Champions, making carts available to players. Barring a setback, Woods’ commitment to the Hero likely means a fourth-straight appearance at the PNC as well.
Stars pull out
Woods wasn’t the only name to be added to the field. Despite announcing an initial 19 of the 20 participants, Woods also announced the inclusion of Lucas Glover and Justin Rose as tournament exemptions.
However, the field remained at 20 pros as World Nos. 5 and 6 Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele were quietly dropped from the commit list.
Schauffele has been a regular at Albany the past few years, while Cantlay was set to make his first appearance at the Hero since 2019. However, both have had somewhat of a tumultuous offseason.
Cantlay was the center of controversy at the Ryder Cup in Rome seven weeks ago when a report from Sky Sports claimed he and Schauffele had divided the U.S. team lockerroom over the issue of player pay. The report also claimed Cantlay chose to be hatless out of protest that week.
The controversy was only further fueled when Schauffele’s father, Stephen told The Times the two were nearly removed from the Ryder Cup roster over a contract dispute.
Cantlay made headlines again this past week when Rory McIlroy told the Irish Independent his relationship with Cantlay, then a fellow PGA Tour player director, was “average at best” and they “see the world quite differently.” McIlroy sent shockwaves through the golf world a few days later when he announced his resignation from the PGA Tour policy board.
McIlroy was not set to play in the Bahamas but the duo’s absence takes the event from having eight of the top 10 in the Official World Golf Rankings to having just two of the top six.