Sunday Best

When the authors and pundits look back on this stage of Tiger Woods’ career, will it be marked “The Second Coming?” Is the Australian Masters a corner-turning moment, or just another masterful mirage? We’ve seen a few peaks and some improbable lows, but this week could act as some validation that Woods is indeed on the fast track to regaining his foothold on professional golf. Will he have success in an event that he has steamrolled through in the past? Here are my preferred opponents for Woods during Sunday’s singles at the Presidents Cup.

3. Ernie Els

One of golf’s classic showdowns, Big Easy and Tiger have slugged it out plenty of times in the past. Most notably during the 2000 Mercedes Championship, with Woods stapling victory by sinking a 40-footer on the first playoff hole. At the 2003 Presidents Cup, Woods and Els anchored their respective teams in a sudden death playoff pitting the two head-to-head. Of course, that result was a tie. A 2011 matchup could dissolve the unfinished business of eight years ago. Both players struggled in 2011, and this could revive a couple of savvy veteran hall of famers.

2. Y.E. Yang

Neither Yang or Woods made major splashes since their incredible battle down the stretch of the 2009 PGA Championship. However, wouldn’t it be fitting to see Woods regain his form by defeating the man who stripped off his cloak of invincibility? After Yang knocked off Woods, it was a monumental avalanche of misfortune and deceit that hurled the 14-time major winner off a cliff of public opinion. Most of Woods’ wounds were self-inflicted, but the collapse against Yang served as the preemptive blow. Woods would certainly salivate at the opportunity for redemption.

1. Adam Scott

This comes as no surprise. Everybody–except probably Adam Scott himself–truly wants to see this. The messy divorce between Woods and caddie Steve Williams took another twist last week, with the disgruntled looper calling his former employer a “black ——-“. High drama awaits indeed. Although it was Woods’ decision to part ways, he appears to still claim the moral high ground. Williams claimed his 2011 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational win with Scott was the “best win [he’s] ever had”. There’s no way that Woods doesn’t want a shot to break Williams down, even know he’s not exactly competing against him. Scott, is just the middle man of this all. If Norman and Couples pull some strings to make this happen on Sunday, I won’t complain. Will you?

Six days ’til Sunday.

  1. No trackbacks yet.

Leave a comment