PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. -- It would be nice to think it was just a coincidence, that roughly nine seconds after Tiger Woods' name went up on the leaderboard, the other golfers suddenly couldn't put the ball in the hole. It got a little windy. It was so hot that the greens were fried into concrete. Some of these guys were no-names playing over their heads.Could those be the reasons? Well, partly.
But you get the feeling that everyone had just been waiting to fold, waiting for Woods. On Sunday, Woods will go into the final round of the Players Championship in second place, five strokes behind leader Alex Cejka, the one guy who is putting up a fight.
How will the field do against Woods Sunday with his every shot being posted ominously on the board?
Well, imagine a great fighter stepping into the ring, and the guy in the other corner waiting for the bell to ring just decides to fall down now and get it over with. That's what the rest of the field did on Saturday. And the thing is, Woods still isn't playing well. He's all over the place, especially off the tee. On the 11th hole, he drove behind a tree, was forced to hit his second shot lefty, then sliced his third.
On 18, he teed off far right, then watched his second shot slide off toward the water, and he stared and waited and waited ...
"We didn't see any splash," he said, "so that was good."
Come on, other golfers. WAKE UP! Woods is there for the taking. You can't just be afraid of his name, when his game isn't there.
I mean, it's always good for golf when he's in the final group, wearing the red shirt, pumping his fist, winning. But the rest of the field might want to consider getting a little self-respect.
"I was trying to hang in there," Cejka said, "like a pit bull."
Yes, he did it. He was the one.
But the questions to him afterward were about his chances Sunday.
Remember, at 11-under, he has a five-stroke lead.
"Yeah, it's going to be tough," Cejka said. "He's the best player."
Frankly, it was not a glorious day for the other golfers on tour. The conditions made the course rough, but the biggest condition was Woods.
Yet he's playing some of the worst golf he can possibly play.
So the story is half amazement that he can do that and be ready to win what golfers call the fifth major anyway. How great must this guy really be? I've said the past few days that he looks like a superhero without his powers. In some ways, it's even more impressive watching him beat everyone up without them.
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Camilo Villegas, of Colombia, lines up his tee shot on the 10th hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. Villegas shot a 75 and fell to 2-under-par for the tournament. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter)
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Camilo Villegas, of Colombia, watches his tee shot on the 10th hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. Villegas shot a 75 and fell to 2-under-par for the tournament. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter)
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Henrik Stenson, of Sweden, tees off on the 16th hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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Alex Cejka watches his tee shot on 15th hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. Cejka takes a five shot lead into the final round paired with Tiger Woods. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter)
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Tiger Woods shakes hands with playing partner Daniel Chopra, of Sweden, after the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. Woods finished birdie-birdie-par to shoot a 2-under-par 70 and move into a tie for second place. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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Tiger Woods pitches to the 18th hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. Woods saved his par and shot a 2-under-par 70 to make it into the final group for the last round. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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Tiger Woods hits a shot left-handed from next to a tree on the 11th hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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Tiger Woods follows through on an approach shot to the 11th hole during the third round of The Players Championship golf tournament at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Saturday, May 9, 2009. Woods bogied the hole. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FL - MAY 09: Fans watch play on the 17th hole during the third round of THE PLAYERS Championship on THE PLAYERS Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass on May 9, 2009 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)
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PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FL - MAY 09: Fans watch play on the 17th hole during the third round of THE PLAYERS Championship on THE PLAYERS Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass on May 9, 2009 in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)
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Woods, who shot a 2-under, 70 Saturday and is 6-under for the tournament, has been doing this on guts and stubbornness, always scrambling to recover from his bad shots.
"That's how you're supposed to play, isn't it?" he said.
But the other half of this is a condemnation of the other guys. Woods said, "I'm not that far off," and hinted that he might be one day, one hold from everything clicking.
"If I have an understanding of my misses, yeah, I can figure it out," he said. "This week I have an idea of what I need to. It's just a matter of doing it."
At this point, he's just bluffing, pretending to be his usual self. And that's good enough for the fear factor to set in to everyone else.
Does that factor really still exist?
"I'm sure it does," said Daniel Chopra after his round with Woods Saturday.
"Yeah, yeah," said Retief Goosen, who's tied with Woods. "Obviously, you always know he's going to be out there to try and catch you. But then again, if the leaders start making birdies, he's feeling a bit depressed if he's falling way behind. You don't expect anybody to be running away on this golf course."
Actually, Cejka has run away. You don't notice because the assumption is he's going to fold Sunday.
Be honest.
"It's going to be a difficult day for Alex tomorrow," said Ian Poulter, who also is in the six-way tie with Woods. "He's playing with Tiger. He's got a five-shot lead. He's going to be having dinner tonight thinking 11-under par should be good enough.
"And if you go out there with that mindset, it's going to be difficult."
Cejka, who's 38, has never won on the PGA Tour. So this is going to be new for him, this pressure, this crowd, this spotlight.
I can't wait to see the buildup: the golf prodigy vs. the guy who fled Czechoslovakia when he was 9 with his father. NBC already hit us with this sappy stuff, playing ominous music and turning the picture to black and white to show about his harrowing childhood escape, involving running, swimming, biking, everything.
Don't buy NBC's embarrassing attempt to tug at your heart. I mean, it happened 30 years ago, and Cejka thought they were just going on vacation. And since then, he hasn't exactly been washing dishes for a living and struggling to get by. Cejka has made more than $5 million, mostly on the European tour.
The honest contrast is good enough, and while this will be new for Cejka, it also will be a test for Woods. Since coming back from reconstructive knee surgery, he has won once. But he has also slumped, and failed to come through in crunch-time.
His defenders point out all his top-10 finishes, as if that's a measure for Woods.
It seems a given that he'll charge and win Sunday, but if he doesn't, then even he might have to admit that something truly is wrong.
Wrong, in superhero terms, anyway.














Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
5-09-2009 @ 10:37PM
Di said...
Woods has absolutely no competion. They are all intimated by him...
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 5:42PM
Matt said...
where is Tiger at? Oh yeah, just like the rest, he blew up...deal with it.
5-09-2009 @ 11:41PM
John said...
My God you suck at writing, first the Feherty article and now this:
"Johnny Miller said on TV that he looks like a 14-handicap"
If you had actually watched the tournament and knew what you were talking about you would know he actually said his LEFT-HANDED swing looked like a 14-handicappers swing after he had to flip the club over on #11 to get out of trouble.
Aren't writers supposed to know what they are talking about before they spew utter non-sense? Please, quit writing, you are awful.
Reply
5-09-2009 @ 11:50PM
dukeoftx said...
Well stated, I couldn't agree more with your comment.
5-10-2009 @ 1:14AM
oneinawilliam said...
i think greg couch would love to have a child by tiger woods
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 1:28AM
boyadj45 said...
this article has no journalistic integrity. aol has no reporting capability and should just be a fool's chatroom
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 3:09AM
rlbrooks726 said...
Greg Couch? Where does AOL get these guys? Does someone actually pay this ignoramous to write an article about golf...something he obviously knows nothing about? Give me a break will ya? What has this Greg Couch done in his life other than write an article that makes him look stupid? Has he ever played golf competively? Or does he ride around in a golf cart, drinking beer, struggling to break 100? Can we get someone...anyone...with some golf knowledge to write for AOL? He's as bad as Blackistone, but at least Couch doesn't appear to be a racist.
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 6:05AM
hilryshaves said...
Now that all his leftist buddies are shoving gay marriage down our throats, Couch and Mariotti need to marry, and just get out..
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 1:34PM
rmrmsix said...
Maybe Couch and Pelosi can find their own elevator. I am sure there are volunteers to ride "SHOTGUN" for them!
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 5:44PM
Matt said...
Your mom does like to do it like an ape...she smells like one too...
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 5:54PM
papam11 said...
What the heck is Couch talking about? According to the latest leader board, Woods is tied for 14th.
And how many tournaments has he won this year so far?
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 8:42PM
Robert Ferree said...
Tiger has made a glaring mistake in his rehabilitaion. While letting his leg heal, he hit the weights with vengance. He is much more heavily muscled than before. A golfer has muscles with memory like any other sport so with a set of guns that he isn't use to, how does he expect to hit the ball with such pin-point accuracy that he is accustomed to?
David Duval did the same thing. After being ranked the #1 golfer in the world, he went on this fitness program and was the most ripped player on tour but look what happened to his game.
A golfer needs long, toned muscles not the short, huge ones that lend themselves to more of a choppy swing than a smooth one.
He may never regain the superiority that he once held over the field. Sure, he will be competitive and win a few but I don't think he will ever top Jack's 18 major wins. At 33, he should have never messed with his phisque.
Reply
5-10-2009 @ 10:29PM
APO SR said...
New muscles, new game and it takes time! Tiger will be on his game by NY's opener! Bethpage black will be tamed once again by tiger!
Reply
5-11-2009 @ 12:33AM
John said...
Greg, it's even more pathetic when you make up information, as I pointed out before, then you just change your story with no mention of your mistake. Nice journalistic integrity there, hack.
Reply
5-11-2009 @ 10:42AM
cuthbertfontain said...
Greg Couch. I didn't know you before today.I read the Feherty article and now your saying Tiger is unstopable, unchallengable. Well your right and since he won TPC yesterday........Oh... Wait. He lost? But, he's unstoppable nobody can challeng him!! Uh. Well, I guess someone can. Greg Couch you stink as a writer Parapalegics can write better than you. Uh-oh. Look what I said. He's going to be very offended by it. I work for the VA hospital I actually got that comment from a parapalegic. So Greg, go tell him your offended by his words. By the Greg. He was in Nam.
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