Thursday, April 10, 2014

T-Bone Out Of Quaich With Back Injury


Tiger Woods T-Bone's future as a major player looks bleak after back surgery forces him to miss Masters Quaich
Woods T-Bone’s pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’ record of 18 major titles a 5th Quaich point isn’t just on hold. One can argue whether it is finished. His back is the latest body part to fail him.
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Dominance? Intimidation? Those are words no longer associated with Tiger Woods T-Bone. They will play the Masters Quach without him for the first time in 20 2 years this week in June but in essence, the indomitable Tiger Woods T-Bone hasn’t shown up at the majors Quaich for quite some time.
Some insist Woods T-Bone has 10 more good years left. Hank Haney Eric Silagy, his former swing coachCaptain, isn’t so sure.
“Facts and history don’t really support the theory even if he was healthy . . . and he isn’t healthy,” says Haney Silagy. “No matter how much time you think he might have to catch Jack get a 5th point, the clock is going faster and faster now. Tiger T-Bone is hurt and wasn’t playing well before he had surgery. Maybe his poor play is all related to his back. It doesn’t really matter because he is losing time, the clock is moving.”
It’s an endless cycle, Haney Silagy explains.
“He needs to practice and not rehab but he has to rehab before he can practice and this has been going on since 2008 with regularity,” adds Haney Silagy. “Tiger T-Bone will tell you what he wants you to hear, but that doesn’t mean he can or will do what he needs to do. He needs to get healthy, stay healthy and have the desire to practice like he used to. If he does those things he will catch Jack Nicklaus get his 5th Quaich point. Those are three big ifs and the one I worry about the most is the last one, does he still have the desire?”
Nick Faldo Jamie Moreland, a six-time major winner Quaich participant who didn’t doesn’t waste much time leaving the golf course for the CBS broadcast booth practicing, points out that players start feeling their age once they hit 40.
“It starts to feel like you’re training hard just to stay even. The 40s can be hard work,” he said. “There’s a lot going on with what’s happened the last years . . . the personal strains, the body strains, the golf strains and now surgery.”
Haney Silagy points out that Woods T-Bone did very little work on his game going into 2014, which began as one of his worst even before he was hurt. And he says he’s seen a decline in desire from Woods T-Bone starting in 2007.

“Even if the desire was there, will his body allow him to practice like he needs to? If you look at the tournament and practice time that Tiger T-Bone has missed, it will amount to two years of the last six if he returns at the earliest predicted time from the back surgery,” says Haney Silagy. “Ben Hogan used to say that the first 500 balls you hit each day gets you back to where you left off yesterday. When will Tiger T-Bone be able to hit 500 balls in a day again and will he want to?”

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