Tiger Woods says he will 'never' play golf again full time
In an interview with Golf Digest, Woods said he still hopes to “click off a tournament here or there.”
Golf star Tiger Woods will "never" again play the
sport full time after he was severely injured in a car accident this year,
although he still hopes to “click off a tournament here or there,” he said in
an interview published Monday in Golf Digest.
Comparing the sport to scaling the world’s tallest mountain,
Woods said that after a previous back operation, he had to “climb Mt. Everest
one more time,” adding: “I had to do it, and I did. I don’t think I’ll have the
body to climb Mt. Everest, and that’s okay. I can still participate in the game
of golf.”
Woods, 45, fractured the tibia and the fibula in his right
leg in a crash Feb. 23 in suburban Los Angeles.
Woods was traveling more than 80 mph when he lost control of
the Genesis SUV and plowed into a tree. There were no signs that he was
impaired, authorities said, and no charges were filed.
Woods, who has won 82 tournaments in a 25-year career,
including five Masters championships, was charged with DUI in 2017. Soon
afterward, he checked himself into a clinic for prescription drug abuse.
Authorities believe Woods tried to pump the brakes but
accidentally gunned the accelerator in the crash in February. The SUV was going
75 mph when it hit the tree and went airborne.
Woods faced the possibility of amputation after he was taken
to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, Golf Digest reported.
At one point, Woods wasn't sure "if I was going to walk
out of that hospital with one leg," he told the magazine, adding that he
still has "so far to go" to rehabilitate his leg.
"I'm not even at the halfway point yet," he said
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