Dr Winston O Boogie jr |
02-23-2015 04:38 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Madelaine Amee
(Post 1018050)
I think Tiger's problems go way back into his childhood. If you compare the type of upbringing that Jack had to that of Tiger, there is a huge difference in every way. Jack appears to have come from a very stable background whereas from the little we really know, Tiger appears to come from a very unstable background. IMHO he had enormous talent as a young child, and has been put on a pedestal from the time he was very young, I have to believe he was told he was a gift to the golfing world, and (I think) was pushed into the world of making huge money instead of staying in college and taking a more normal route. I am a firm believer in that we are a product of our environment...........
If he had gradually quit when his body started to fail he could have been a super star for the rest of his life, instead he is going to be remembered primarily for the "incident" which basically ruined his life. A terrible waste.:sad:
|
Huh?? We know a tremendous amount about Tiger's upbringing and there is nothing to suggest that it was in any way unstable. He had a loving father and mother. His father began bringing him to the golf course when he was very young and Tiger loved it. Earl Woods spent countless hour working with Tiger on his game. But only because Tiger loved doing it. He was never forced to go to the golf course. He looked forward to it every time his father would come home from work.
He still has a wonderful relationship with his mother who sometimes attends his tournaments.
I do believe that he has constantly tried to make too many "improvements" in his swing and they might have led to his over complicating things. In fact his breakup with Hank Haney came after Hank told him to stop worrying about his swing and start trying to improve his three putt avoidance stats. All of the complicated thoughts may be what has led to the chipping yips. Once you start trying to understand and analyze every movement you can tend to not let things just happen as they need to.
Tiger's work with Butch Harmon was productive and helped him a bit. When he got together with Hank Haney, upon the advice of Mark O'Meara, his game really came together. Hank worked on his plane a lot which was not great during his amateur career and his early professional career. After that and even in his last days with Hank, he began to get a bit too into the minutiae. The of course, a short time after that was the incident with his wife and the exposure of his somewhat seedy personal life. I really believe that after that, his min was never the same.
I don't think anyone is kicking anyone to the curb by the way. I was and still am a big Tiger fan. He did for golf in the minority communities and with youth what Arnie did for the blue collar workers. When Tiger played, golf interest among those two demographics exploded. The game grew as much during Tiger's peak years as it ever had. I know, I was in the business before and during the Tiger years.
I do think however that we can realistically look at what has happened to him in the past several years. He is certainly not the dominating force that he once was. Even before this latest comeback, he was not dominating. And, if he does indeed, as I suspect, have the chipping yips, the chances of him having another comeback are remote. I'd love to see him come back and break Jack's records, but sadly, I am having serious doubts that that will ever happen. I say that with sadness. Not in the spirit of kicking him to the curb.
|