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Pro golf sans Tiger is almost irrelevant

by 24.199.215.86
created June 20, 2008
7
Vote

As riveting as the last two days of the 2008 U.S. Open were, including the 19-hole Monday playoff, the rest of the season will be bland, boring, a snoozer.

One reason: the absence of Tiger Woods.

For the first time since Woods joined the tour, commissioner Tim Finchem will discover just how lame the PGA Tour is when the world's best player is at home every week of the season. And there's nothing he can do about it. He needs a great player to capture the public's attention, but that's not in his hands.

Phil Mickelson? Despite his risk-taking, his sporadic play is no fun to watch.

Sergio Garcia? He's also way too inconsistent, even without the painful preparation routine before each shot.

Of course there remain plenty of capable players on tour, and the final two majors of the season could contain their share of back-nine drama, but Woods is in a league of his own when it comes to talent and the ability to play in any condition. Name one other player who would have played last weekend's tournament with one good leg -- yeah, there aren't any.

As a casual golf fan, I'll probably still tune into the final-day coverage of the British Open and PGA Championship, but without Woods I'll have no rooting interest. I'll simply watch if a good, exciting finish is in store.

Woods is almost like the Yankees. Either you're rooting for him or against him -- and regardless of your stance, you're admiring the amazing shots he pulls off. I was at my family reunion Sunday, sitting in a room full of Lloyd's as Woods snuck in his tying putt on No. 18.

Earlier in the day, I had bet my uncle Chuck $5 that Woods would win the tournament, so I gave a slight fist pump when the putt dropped. Other family members cheered, while some "we want 45-year-old Rocco Mediate to win" folks let out groans. It was one of those great family moments shared in front of the TV screen.

I guarantee you hardly anyone would have been watching if Woods wasn't in contention -- that's how popular he is among the general public; how else can good television ratings for Monday afternoon's back-and-forth battle with Mediate be explained? Put another golfer in Woods' place, and much more office work would have gotten done on that day.

The name "Tiger Woods" sells itself.

Now, the tour has to figure out a way to attract attention and TV viewers while Woods rests at home. Finchem is billing the coming months as an opportunity for young players to build name-recognition among golf fans, and I'm sure that all tour players see the rest of the '08 schedule as a great chance to win a few tournaments.

Which is all gravy for the pros, who will continue to play from the same tee boxes and for the same large purses -- and not have to deal with a man wearing red on Sunday afternoons.

But Finchem better hope that Woods returns healthy and with his game intact come 2009, because the rest of this season will prove just how irrelevant the tour is to the casual golf fan when Tiger isn't striding toward the green, determined to make that tournament-winning putt.

Especially during an Olympics/election year.


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ThecrookedcapAll-Star
115 days ago
Score 5+-
I actually believe the contrary. If you're really into professional golf, this actually makes the remaining tournaments very interesting. For so long Tiger has been the "default" winner and it has seemed that only somebody else wins when he falters. Now every tournament is really wide open.
Permalink | Reply
CheezerMajor Leaguer
115 days ago
Score 3+-
Let's dismiss the entire field because one guy isn't there. I guarantee you...if it's competitive, people will watch.
Permalink | Reply
KelsdadAll-Star
115 days ago
Score 4+-
I agree, everyone will be more motivated now, which will mean better play. With Tiger gone, guys come into the picture as possible contenders to win tournaments who wouldn't otherwise have a shot. Of course, the normal US thrashing in the Ryder Cup will be worse than usual.
Permalink | Reply
Davis21wylieAll-Star
115 days ago
Score 0+-
Wouldn't it be the ultimate Ewing Theory moment, though -- US Ryder Cup team is hapless with the greatest golfer in the world, but without him they somehow pull off the impossible upset? Mark my words, there's definite Ewing potential here...
Permalink
DrpatriotAll-American
114 days ago
Score 1+-
I have to give credit to Bill Simmons, who wrote the Ewing Theory article, for noting the 2001 Patriots as possible candidates for a Ewing Theory effect before Bledsoe was even injured. Well done, Bill Simmons, well done.
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
114 days ago
Score 0+-
You guys are outdated - it's the Tiki Theory... Oh wait never mind, you're just Pats fans unable to come to terms with last February - LONG LIVE THE TIKI THEORY!!!!
Permalink
IbeargRed-Shirting
115 days ago
Score 0+-
I have never watched more golf then i did sunday and monday. While we need to give tiger the credit for being great the rest of the field should be embarrassed to lose to a man on one leg. They have to know their victories the rest of this year are diminished by tiger not being there.
Permalink | Reply
LASportsblogAAA-er
114 days ago
Score 0+-
Retief Goosen, his wife, his parents, extended family, and unrelated peoples who share the name Goosen should all be extremely embarrassed for him. He's disgraceful.
Permalink
LASportsblogAAA-er
114 days ago
Score 0+-
It only becomes irrelevant if you think of Indy/Cart Racing and WNBA are irrelevant. It drops back from a casual sports fan sport to a total niche sport, but it's hardly irrelevant - still plenty of exciting golf to be had without Tiger.
Permalink | Reply
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Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User 24.199.215.86 | June 20, 2008 | June 2008 | Golf Opinions

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