Resigning from Augusta National Golf Club, Tiger Woods made his eagerly anticipated comeback.
All of you have a happy plane-tracking season. It appears that in previous years, everyone has been speculating wildly about whether Tiger Woods will try his hand at the Masters in March. And that involves using a microscope to track both his and his plane’s motions.
Could Woods’ aircraft have arrived at the site of the opening major of the year, where its owner has five victories and is essentially free to play whenever he pleases?
Until he informs the competition that he won’t participate, Woods, a previous champion, is in the field at Augusta National for the Masters. He’s not required to “commit” on Friday of the tournament, unlike on the PGA Tour. Woods is reported as being in the field on the Masters website right now.
Since turning pro, Woods has never failed to make the cut throughout the Masters. He tied the tournament record with his 23rd straight consecutive cut at Augusta until quitting in twenty-three years.
His objective for 2024, he stated in December at his charity event in the Bahamas, was to play “a tournament a month.” However, he did not participate in the PGA Tour in January and did not attend the Players Championship or the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the two tournaments he seemed most likely to play in March as well.
Tigers’ final appearance on the field occurred at the Genesis Invitational in February, an event that benefits both his foundation and him as the host. However, he pulled out of his second round halfway through, claiming to have the flu. He did not go to the Los Angeles prize presentation event.
Two weeks later, in early March, Woods did heal enough to make his debut at the prestigious Seminole Pro-Member in Palm Beach, Florida. Along with CEO of the PGA of America Seth Waugh, he finished T44 in the gross flight and T33 in the net division. That was a private occasion, though.