U.S. golfer Tiger Woods smiles during a golf clinic in Mexico City
Tiger
Woods has shut it down for the rest of the professional golf season,
bringing into question his playing future as the best golfer of his
generation will be away from the sport for over a year when, and if, he
returns.
Woods, who
is recovering from multiple back surgeries that have kept him out of
action for nearly a year, hinted earlier this year that he might not
play this season but it was finally made official on Tuesday.
The
PGA Championship announced that Woods had withdrawn from the July 28-31
event at Baltusrol, marking the first time he will miss all four majors
in a calendar year, while his agent confirmed his client is done for
the season.
"Not going to play in
the '15/'16 season. We will assess this Fall when to come back and play
for the '16/'17 season," Mark Steinberg said in an email to Reuters
after Golf Channel had first reported the news.
The
2016-17 PGA Tour season starts in mid-October in Napa, California,
which marks the start of a seven-tournament run through November before
the schedule resumes in January.
No
one, not even Woods, can possibly know how the former world number one
will fare when he makes his PGA Tour return after an absence that dates
back to the Wyndham Championship in August 2015, where he tied for
10th.
Woods, famously, used to say he would never
tee it up in a golf tournament unless he thought he was capable of
winning and he is clearly being cautious about rushing his return to a
game that has since seen a handful of young stars crowd the top of the
world rankings.
Woods, who made 11
starts on the PGA Tour last season and just seven the season before, had
his first back surgery in early 2014. A second microdisectomy was
performed last September with a follow-up procedure six weeks later.
In
late February, in an effort to shoot down reports that suggested he
endured setbacks during his rehabilitation process, Woods posted a video
of himself swinging a golf club in front of an indoor golf simulator,
seemingly without discomfort.
A week later the
14-times major champion said he was feeling "a lot better" and still had
intentions of playing golf "at the highest level."
In
mid-May, Woods said he was "progressing nicely" but then hit three
balls into the water on a short par-three hole during an exhibition to
promote a tournament he hosts.
Last
month, Woods indicated that he might not return to competition this
year, saying he needed to be patient during his recovery.
A winner of 79 PGA
Tour titles, Woods was world number one a record total of 683 weeks but
his form has slipped dramatically in recent years due to injuries and
the mastering of a new swing, while his ranking has plummeted to a
mind-boggling 628th.
"It's been a
long road," Woods said in April after playing his first stretch of holes
since last August, at a golf course opening in Montgomery, Texas.
"To
actually be able to play soccer with my kids again, to do something
like this, to be able to live life, that's what's been nice. Five months
ago I couldn't."
The 40-year-old Woods has not won a tournament since 2013 and last won a major at the 2008 U.S. Open.
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