Skip navigation
Listen now:
NBC Sports: The Rob Buska Show

All was not lost for now-healthy Tiger

Early defeat disappointing, but no knee pain good sign as Masters looms

MARANA, Ariz. - The plane was a nice touch, even if it was a day late. It circled lazily above the Arizona desert as Tiger Woods made his way around the front nine, towing a banner welcoming the greatest player of his time back to the game that has missed him so much.

There didn’t seem any need to rush. Woods showed the day before that his game was as good as ever, and there was nothing in either the swing or attitude of a South African who has never won on the PGA Tour to indicate he would end up as anything but another hapless victim as Woods continued his triumphant return to golf.

Tim Clark looked like the guy who might be buying a beer in front of you at the concession stand instead of battling Woods on the fairways. If he wasn’t followed closely by a caddie carrying a big bag with his name on it, the marshals clearing the way for Woods between holes might have stopped him and given him a lecture about trying to sneak inside the ropes.

Beat Tiger Woods? Clark stood a better chance of getting his autograph.

The beauty of golf, though, is that, really, anything can happen. Woods has been saying it for years, even if we didn’t always believe it.

Because until Thursday it hardly ever happened to him.

Clark changed that with the round of his life, shocking Woods with a back nine barrage of birdies that short-circuited what was expected to be a five-day celebration of all things Tiger amid the pristine fairways and giant saguaro cactuses north of Tucson. As Woods left, so did the fans, streaming from the course by the thousands even while other matches went on at the Accenture Match Play Championship.

One of the most anticipated returns in sports ended just 16 holes into its second day, much to the dismay of tournament organizers and network executives. The buzz generated by Woods’ first competitive rounds since limping his way to victory in the U.S. Open eight months ago had provided a stimulus the sport desperately needed, though it was short-lived.

Clark was feeling pretty good about things, And, almost surprisingly, so was Woods.

His exit was untimely, but his knee felt great. He lost, but thought he hit the ball as good as ever.

And they don’t give out green jackets in Arizona anyway.

“I was very pleased that walking down the cart paths and obviously playing, getting some rhythm of playing, that I have no soreness, no pain,” Woods said. “Now it’s just a matter of getting back and playing and playing more rounds.”

Those rounds likely will take place in Florida over the next month or so as Woods prepares himself for the Masters, though he was purposely vague about his future plans. Typically, though, he plays at Doral and at Bay Hill to begin sharpening his game for Augusta National, and there’s nothing to indicate he’ll do anything differently this time around.

By then, the frenzy that surrounded his return will have largely subsided. It already seemed that way on Thursday, when the crowds and the media mob weren’t nearly as large as they were the day before when Woods beat Brendan Jones.

The story line will change, too, as it shifts from Woods’ surgically repaired left knee to speculation about whether he can add to his 14 major championship titles and surpass the record of 18 set by the great Jack Nicklaus. If Woods can add even one or two majors to his collection this year he’ll not only close in on a childhood goal, but inch closer to winning the consensus, if mythical, title of greatest golfer ever.

His peers already acknowledge him as such, talking about him in reverential terms, always careful not to say anything that will trigger his long memory. Clark was no exception after a round played so beautifully that he couldn’t recall a shot he didn’t hit where he wanted to.

“I put a lot of iron shots pretty close, and I think perhaps he wasn’t expecting that,” Clark said. “But I don’t think I’m ever going to intimidate Tiger, let’s put it that way.”

Usually it’s Woods who is doing the intimidating, though on this day the 5-foot-7 player with a bit of a belly struck a blow for the hopes of challengers everywhere by doing what most thought he had no chance of doing. Even more shocking, perhaps, was how easy it seemed and how quickly it ended.

Woods seemed to want to get away even quicker, taking just a few questions before leaving a course that suddenly didn’t look nearly as welcoming as it did just a few days earlier.

Thirty-two holes into his comeback, he had some plans he hadn’t anticipated waking up on this morning.

Asked what he would do next, Woods didn’t waste any words.

“Go to the airport.”

More on Tiger WoodsTim Clark

© 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

advertisement
Slideshow
Tiger Woods
  Woods makes his return
Take a look at Tiger Woods' return to golf in the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.

more photos

Latest golf video
Perry sinks tremendous shot while standing in the sand
Kenny Perry gets himself out of trouble by sinking a beautiful shot while standing in the bunker. Perry has the lead after three rounds of the Senior PGA Championship.

Slideshow
Jack Nicklaus
  Top 10 'accessible' golf courses
From California to Florida, these amazing greens are open for anyone to play.

more photos

Slideshow
Luke Donald
  Outdueling the field
Take a look at the golfers who have won at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.

NBCSports.com