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Woods’ father dies of cancer at age 74


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Earl Woods was born March 5, 1932, in Manhattan, Kan., the youngest of six children. His parents died by the time he was 13.

His father wanted him to play for the Kansas City Monarchs in the Negro Leagues, and his mother stressed education. Woods wound up going to Kansas State, graduating in 1953 with a degree in sociology.

Woods did two tours during the Vietnam War as a member of the U.S. Army Special Forces, rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel. It was his second tour that shaped the latter part of his life:

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He met Kultida Punsawad, who was working as a receptionist in Thailand, and married her in 1969. He fought alongside Lt. Col. Nguyen T. Phong of the South Vietnamese army, a friend he nicknamed “Tiger” because of his courage and bravery. Woods promised Tiger Phong that he would name a son after him.

Eldrick “Tiger” Woods was born Dec. 30, 1975.

Earl Woods moved to Cypress, Calif., — to the house where he died — and set up a makeshift practice range in the garage with a mat and a net, placing his son in a high chair as he practiced.

The education went beyond swinging a club.

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“I tried to break him down mentally, tried to intimidate him verbally, by saying, ‘Water on the right, OB on the left,’ just before his downswing,” Woods once said in an AP interview. “He would look at me with the most evil look, but he wasn’t permitted to say anything. That’s the frustration. He couldn’t say a word, but he always had an escape word. He never used it.

“One day I did all my tricks, and he looked at me and smiled,” Woods said. “At the end of the round, I told him, ‘Tiger, you’ve completed the training.’ And I made him a promise. ’You’ll never run into another person as mentally tough as you.’ He hasn’t. And he won’t.”

Woods was proud of saying he never left his son with a babysitter, but his goal was to eventually let Tiger run his own life.

“I had pulled back, one item at a time,” Woods once told the AP. “Instead of going to several tournaments, it was a couple of tournaments, then one tournament. All of a sudden, he was running everything. I stood there and watched it happen. Because that was my job — to prepare him to leave.”

Besides his wife and Tiger, Woods is survived by three children from his previous marriage.

A private service will be held Friday.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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