First-time underdog
The World Cup will help Tiger Woods roll to another Pebble Beach romp
The World Cup is Tiger Woods' best friend, one that is going to push him right to major win number 15.
With the globe fixated on buzzing vuzuzelas, bumbling British goalies and the real chance that South Africa could be the first host nation ever to not make the cut to 16, Tiger gets the benefit of playing in arguably, the least focused on, major of his career. If this U.S. Open had any less attention on it, it'd be a WNBA game.
In case you don't remember, it starts tomorrow at Pebble Beach — the same day that even U.S. sports fans who aren't pretending to like soccer will be focused on a rare NBA Finals Game 7.
The U.S. Open media center has less reporters in it than anytime in recent memory (all those international columnists are in South Africa), according to several golf writers there. Even the usually devoted California golf crowd couldn't get that caught up in this Open. Tickets to Thursday's first round didn't sell out till Sunday.
No one's even asking Tiger about his sex scandal. Instead, the world's No. 1 golfer (and yes, Woods is still ranked No. 1, despite all the talk about Phil Mickelson being the favorite) is getting quizzed on English soccer goalie Robert Green, the man who gifted the U.S. a tie.
"Our goal was a gift, but I hope the goalkeeper gets another chance to play," Woods said, who clearly doesn't know Green's name. "We all make mistakes."
Now, everyone's mistake is discounting Tiger's chances of rediscovering his dominance on the Pebble Beach course where he once won a major by a record 15 strokes. Yes, Tiger's been inconsistent at best since his wild driveway ride. Yes, he hasn't played much this year.
And none of its matters.
By Sunday afternoon, Woods will have pushed even the vuzuzela off the world's front pages. It will be called Tiger's miracle, but it couldn't be any more predictable no matter how many people refuse to see it coming.