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Injuries catch up with Tiger
published: Friday | June 20, 2008


Tiger Woods reacts after taking his second shot on the fourth fairway during the fourth round of the US Open championship at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego. Woods will miss the rest of the season because of a left knee that will require more surgery. - AP

SAN DIEGO (AP):

TIGER WOODS' career has been defined by mind-boggling numbers.

In just a dozen years on the PGA Tour, he has won 65 times to rank third on the all-time list behind Sam Snead and Jack Nicklaus. Woods has won 14 majors, closing on the record 18 won by Nicklaus and joining the 'Golden Bear' as the only players to win the career Grand Slam three times over. He is 44-3 on tour when he has at least a share of the 54-hole lead.

The latest number is the most troubling - three surgeries on his left knee in five years.

Two days after a gruelling US Open that took him five days and 91 holes to win, Woods said on Wednesday he will have reconstructive surgery on his left knee to repair a torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), forcing him to miss the rest of the season.

Long-term health

"While I am obviously disappointed to have to miss the remainder of the season, I have to do the right thing for my long-term health and look forward to returning to competitive golf when my doctors agree my knee is sufficiently healthy," Woods said on his website. "My doctors assure me with the proper rehabilitation and training, the knee will be strong and there will be no long-term effects."

And it wasn't just the knee hurting him at Torrey Pines. Woods also revealed that he had a double stress fracture in his left tibia, suffered two weeks before the US Open.

So what was he doing playing the US Open?

"You don't get to be Tiger Woods by having everyone tell you what to do," swing coach Hank Haney said.

That apparently includes doctors.

Haney was with Woods when doctors discovered the stress fractures and prescribed three weeks on crutches, followed by three weeks of rest.

"Tiger looked at the doctor and said, 'I'm playing the US Open and I'm going to win'. And then he started putting on his shoes," Haney said. "He looked at me and said, 'Come on, Hank. We'll just putt today'. Every night, I kept thinking there was no chance he's going to play. He had to stop in his tracks for 30 seconds walking from the dining room table to the refrigerator.

"He was not going to miss the US Open at Torrey Pines. There just wasn't any discussion."

Woods first had a benign cyst removed from his left knee in 1994 when he was in college. Five years ago, he had surgery to remove fluid from inside and around the ACL. He had surgery again on April 15, two days after the Masters, to clean out cartilage in the left knee.

Woods said he tore the ACL while running at home after the British Open last year, but it didn't bother him. He finished the year by winning four of five tournaments, including a major. He stayed home in the off season, hoping rest would help his knee, but the pain returned in the spring.

Torn ACL

He said the cartilage damage was a result of the torn ACL, and thought surgery in April would help get him through the year.

"I was determined, though, to do everything and anything in my power to play in the US Open at Torrey Pines, which is a course that is close to where I grew up and holds many special memories for me," Woods said. "Although I will miss the rest of the 2008 season, I'm thrilled with the fact that last week was such a special tournament."

His next surgery has widespread ramifications.

Woods will miss a major for the first time in his career, the British Open at Royal Birkdale.

Coincidentally, it was at Birkdale in 1998 where Nicklaus' record of consecutive majors played ended at 146. Woods was the only player with a reasonable chance to match that record, but not anymore.

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