Tiger Woods will return to competition at PNC Championship

AP photo by Fernando Llano / Tiger Woods, right, speaks with his trainer Kolby Wayne during a practice session at the Albany Golf Club last Saturday in New Providence, Bahamas, where Woods was hosting his annual Hero World Challenge golf tournament.
AP photo by Fernando Llano / Tiger Woods, right, speaks with his trainer Kolby Wayne during a practice session at the Albany Golf Club last Saturday in New Providence, Bahamas, where Woods was hosting his annual Hero World Challenge golf tournament.

Ten months after his right leg was badly damaged in a car crash, Tiger Woods is returning to competition next week with his 12-year-old son Charlie in the PNC Championship.

"Although it's been a long and challenging year, I am very excited to close it out by competing in the PNC Championship with my son Charlie," Woods wrote on Twitter. "I'm playing as a Dad and couldn't be more excited and proud."

It will be Tiger's first competitive golf - even if it is in a tournament he described last week as the "hit-and-giggle" variety that he can play - since the 15-time major winner and his son tied for seventh a year ago in the unofficial event that pairs family members.

Tournament officials were holding a spot for Woods, and he fueled speculation he might play the Dec. 18-19 event at the Ritz Carlton Golf Club Orlando when he took full swings with driver this past weekend during the PGA Tour's Hero World Challenge, the 20-player event he annually hosts in the Bahamas.

"We have been liaising with Tiger and his team for some time and are delighted that he has now decided to make his return to competitive golf at the PNC Championship," said Alastair Johnston of IMG, the executive chairman of the event.

Woods was driving to a Los Angeles course for a television shoot on Feb. 23 when police say he was driving about 85 mph along a winding, coastal suburban road. The SUV crashed through a median and plunged down a hill.

Doctors said he shattered the tibia and fibula bones in his right leg in multiple locations. Those were stabilized by a rod in the tibia. A combination of screws and pins were used to stabilize additional injuries in the ankle and foot.

Woods said last week that amputation was considered. He declined to discuss specifics of the crash, saying only "you can read about all that there in the police report."

The PNC Championship was formerly known as the Father-Son Challenge until it changed the title to be more inclusive of family members. For the first time in its 24 years, the tournament has a current world-ranked No. 1 player in the field: Nelly Korda of the LPGA Tour, who will be playing with her father Petr, a former Australian Open tennis champion.

Lee Trevino is playing again and has never missed the tournament since it began in 1995. Justin Thomas returns as the reigning champion with his father Mike, a longtime PGA professional.

Still, this is now all about Woods inside the ropes, hitting shots that count toward a score. A year ago, it was his last event before a fifth back surgery, not as serious as the previous ones. Toward the end of the second round, he was not hitting some tee shots because his son played from a forward tee and was getting it out there farther than Woods could have hit it.

Fans are returning to the Florida course this year after not being allowed last December due to the coronavirus pandemic, and the tournament already is close to a sellout because organizers limit ticket sales to preserve the intimate nature of the event.

The next question will be when Woods, who shares the PGA Tour's career wins record with Sam Snead at 82, will play in an official event.

He had said last week that was a long way off, dousing hopes of a return by suggesting his leg wouldn't allow him to practice as much and that he was at peace with the limitation: "I've made the climb enough times." He also said he hadn't reached a point of deciding whether to complete a full comeback from his latest injuries.

"I'll play a round here or there, a little hit and giggle, I can do something like that," he said. "To see some of my shots fall out of the sky a lot shorter than they used to is a little eye-opening, but at least I'm able to do it again. That's something that for a while there it didn't look like I was going to. Now I'm able to participate in the sport of golf.

"Now, to what level? I do not know that."

The first level is with his son at his side in a 36-hole event in which he doesn't have to hit every shot and can ride in a cart. But the score will count, and that hasn't happened since the PNC Championship last year.

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