When Tiger's famous personal collapse came along, his game collapsed along with it. But that was a while ago, and if Michael Weinreb, writing for Grantland, is to be believed, nobody really cares much anymore (except maybe Tiger himself). The question is, will Tiger find his game again?
Two months after Tiger won his first Masters, I went to see him play at the Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio. I was doing what everyone else was doing at the time: I was there to write about how Tiger had changed the nature of golf, about how he might potentially change the nature of race relations in America... I subscribed to the mystique of Tiger because I was young, and he was of my generation, and I had never experienced a force of nature like him before. His youth and his background and his verve seemed intelligently designed to decontaminate a sport that clung hard to outdated tradition, and I imagined (naively, perhaps) that this would translate to the outside world as well.
This is a great essay about Tiger Woods and about golf and about aging and celebrity, and the timing of the Masters weekend makes this the perfect time to read it: The Aging Tiger Woods.
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