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9:25AM

RealClearSports: No End to the Tiger Tale

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


There's no piling-on penalty in golf. Or life. People just keep swinging away, at a person's character, or at a ball. And so every few minutes there's another revelation involving Tiger Woods. Enough already.

Tiger made a mistake. Not crashing his Escalade. Not womanizing. In underestimating what his status is worth in the news business. TMZ? Maureen Dowd? The Times of London? David Letterman? Everybody is smacking him around.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009
6:05PM

Newsday: Tiger by tale par for Chevron tourney course

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. -- The year that was in golf (a U.S. Open at Bethpage, 59-year-old Tom Watson nearly winning the British Open) comes to a close Sunday with what might be called the week that wasn't. Or, depending on viewpoints, the week that shouldn't have been.

Tiger Woods' annual tournament, the $7.5-million Chevron World Challenge, had everything to do with scandal, headlines, confessions and outrage, but because of the accident that kept Woods from playing but didn't keep the world from prying, it had very little to do with golf.

Woods, of course, was involved in that car accident at 2:25 on the morning of Nov. 27 in front of his home in the gated Florida community of Isleworth, outside Orlando.

That led to questions - where was he going at 2:25 a.m. the day after Thanksgiving. Admissions of sexual dalliances by several women. Disbelief from those who idolize Woods and then an acknowledgment by Woods on his Web site that he is guilty of "transgressions."

Even Saturday the gossip and rumors continued -- a report from Orlando that Woods lost several teeth when he was hit in the mouth, either by a golf club swung by angry wife Elin Nordegren or in the crash, and that a fourth woman was involved with Woods.

"It's been a little weird," said Steve Stricker of this Chevron, a tournament that benefits the Tiger Woods Foundation. "I was really looking forward to this event, and all the things that were going on brought me down . . . I think we're tired of hearing about it. I was flipping the channels, and I mean even Nancy Grace is discussing it."

Stricker, who partnered Woods in the four-ball and foursomes of the recent Presidents Cup matches in San Francisco, understands why.

"We've built him up to such a person,'' he said, "and shame on us for thinking that's really what it's all about."

The 54-hole lead of the Chevron, at Sherwood Country Club about 40 miles west of Los Angeles, is shared by Graeme McDowell and Y.E. Yang at 10-under-par 206, with Lee Westwood and Padraig Harrington at 9-under 207.

Yang, of Korea, is the one who beat Woods down the stretch in the PGA Championship in August at Hazeltine. McDowell, from Northern Ireland, was the last player in the field, invited to fill the void after Woods announced he was "unable to play."

En route to Orlando, where he lives, from the World Cup in China, McDowell was going through Los Angeles and was notified he would be invited. He stayed and played.

"I woke up Saturday morning [in China], put on the laptop to see what was going on . . . Tiger had been in a car accident,'' he said. "The shock and the scandal and everything made for some interesting reading.

"Typical locker-room chatter on Sunday. Probably disbelief more than anything, and obviously the rumor mill was working overtime on the weekend. Will we ever know what really happened? . . . I mean, it's been front-page news all over the world. He is that big."

The January issue of Golf Digest magazine has a computer photo cover of Woods, as caddie, lining up a putt for Barack Obama, the ultimate in bad timing.

The 2010 PGA Tour begins in a month, Jan. 7 in Kapalua, Hawaii. Tiger, if he's recovered from the injuries, probably will start at the San Diego Invitational Jan. 28.

"It will be interesting to see how he handles this," Kenny Perry told The Associated Press. "This is a totally different knock on him when he gets out there and plays next year."

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Copyright © 2009 Newsday. All rights reserved.
9:21AM

RealClearSports: Sports Coverage Has Changed; Has Tiger?

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. - It's all changed, now and forever. The genie is out of the bottle, and he's not going back. Sports will be different. Golf will be different.

Whether Tiger Woods is different remains a question to be answered, both by his clubs and his actions or reactions.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009
6:00AM

Newsday: Rachel Uchitel's lawyer cancels news conference

By NEWSDAY.com STAFF
and THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
With Art Spander
SPECIAL TO NEWSDAY


LOS ANGELES -- A lawyer for Rachel Uchitel, the Hamptons nightclub hostess who denied having an affair with Tiger Woods, has canceled a news conference that had been scheduled for Thursday in Los Angeles.

Attorney Gloria Allred’s office says in a statement that the news conference has been canceled due to unforeseen circumstances. The statement does not elaborate on the circumstances.

Allred told The Associated Press in a brief telephone interview that there will be no further statements on the matter.

Allred earlier had planned to make a statement about Rachel Uchitel’s relationship with Woods.

Last week, the National Enquirer published a story alleging the world’s No. 1 golfer had been seeing Uchitel, a New York nightclub hostess, and that they recently were together in Melbourne, where Woods competed in the Australian Masters.

Uchitel denied having an affair with Woods when contacted by The Associated Press and in an interview with the New York Post.

"This is ridiculous," she told the Post. "Not a word of it is true ... I told the Enquirer and Star that it wasn't true. I told them not only did I have information to disprove the story, but I offered to take a lie-detector test.

"It's the most ridiculous story. It's like they are asking me to comment if there are aliens on Earth."

Woods has faced intense media scrutiny after a car accident outside his home early last Friday and sordid allegations of affairs.

On Wednesday, Woods broke his silence and acknowledged he had “not been true to my values and the behavior my family deserves.”

Most of Woods' fellow golfers have also stayed silent. But Jesper Parnevik, who with his wife, Mia, introduced Woods to his wife, Nordegren, told the Golf Channel, "I really feel sorry for Elin."

Woods' wife was working as a nanny for the Parneviks when they introduced her to Woods during the 2001 British Open at Royal Lytham & St. Annes. The couple married in 2004.

"We probably thought he was a better guy than he is,'' Parnevik said.
Alluding to reports Nordegren bashed Woods' Cadillac with a golf club, he added, "I would probably need to apologize to her and hope she uses a driver next time instead of a three-iron.''

The reports on the two other women include:

-- Jaimee Grubbs, a Las Vegas cocktail waitress, who said she had a 31-month relationship with Woods, and released a recorded voice mail that she said was left by Woods in which he tells her his wife might be calling her soon.

-- Kalika Moquin, a nightclub promoter in Las Vegas, also had a relationship with Woods, according to a story in Life & Style magazine.

In the wake of the accident and scrutiny, Woods has opted to sit out his annual pro-am golf tournament.

The pros in the pro-am of the $7.5-million Chevron World Challenge, the tournament which benefits Woods' foundation, were less critical of Woods.

"I think his image is going to take a little bit of a shot,'' said Steve Stricker of Woods. "I'd like to see him come on TV and just pour it out a little bit and show what happened.''

The Chevron, limited to 18 pros, starts Thursday. Stricker finished second last year. A month and a half ago he partnered with Woods in the Presidents Cup in San Francisco.

"People forget,'' said Stricker about Woods' difficulties. "And if he does the right things from now on, people will forgive . . . I'm sure he will bounce back.''

Tournament officials announced that because Woods, No. 1 in the world rankings, is not playing they would issue refunds for tickets previously purchased.

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Copyright © 2009 Newsday. All rights reserved.
10:24AM

RealClearSports: We Don't Need to Know About Tiger

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. -- This was in the winter of ’97. Tiger Woods was a pro only a few months but long enough to win a tournament that let everyone know of his coming greatness. He was in the interview tent at Riviera for the Nissan/L.A. Open, where there were so many people trying to get in that seats had to be assigned.

A woman reporter from one of those TV gossip programs, the type that deal with celebrities and hearsay, was asking Tiger about his social life. When he dismissed her inquiry, saying, "I don't talk about those things,'' she screamed out, "But you have to. We need to know.''

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2009