Tiger Woods will be at Augusta National, but will he play?Getty Images
Tiger Woods will be at Augusta National in seven weeks. That much we know.
The only question left is: Will the 15-time major champion be teeing it up at the Masters or merely watching as Rory McIlroy makes his title defense?
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In his pre-tournament press conference as the host of the Genesis Invitational, Woods teased that the Masters was not off the table for him but would not elaborate further on what that meant or how he would structure his preparation should he feel his body and game are ready to return.
On Saturday, Woods joined the CBS broadcast booth during the third round and artfully sidestepped a question from Jim Nantz. As CBS rolled a promo for the Masters, Nantz mentioned McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler before asking Woods if he knew anyone else who would be playing at Augusta National in 50 days.
“I know I’ll be there,” Woods said. “We’re going to open up The Patch. [Trevor Immelman] and I are going to be part of a great dinner. I know a lot of people who are playing.”
But is it a real possibility that Woods will tee it up at this year’s Masters?
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“There is,” Woods said with a smile.
What the pre-tournament preparation would look like is still up in the air, with Woods presenting a myriad of pre-Masters options, including his PGA Tour Champions debut.
“I don’t know,” Woods said when asked if he would play a tournament before the Masters if he decided to return. “Whether it’s regular [PGA] Tour, senior Tour or member-guest, I don’t know.”
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Tiger Woods celebrates the 2019 Masters. Anthony Kim celebrates LIV Golf Adelaide
Woods, who has not played competitively since the 2024 Open Champions, is still rehabbing from the lumbar disc replacement surgery he had in October. He said he has progressed to hitting full shots but isn’t at the level where he can return to competitive play. That’s a work in progress.
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“It’s just one of those things where each and every day, I keep trying, I keep progressing, I keep working on it, trying to get stronger, trying to get more endurance in this body and trying to get it at a level at which I can play at the highest level again,” Woods said during his pre-tournament press conference.
When leader Jacob Bridgeman hit a 7-wood to two feet for a tap-in eagle on Riviera’s par-5 11th, Woods joked that he isn’t “hitting it like that” yet.
“I wish I could be out this week playing with these guys. Watching these kids play this golf course is quite fun,” Woods said.
Here’s what else we learned from Woods’ time in the CBS booth.
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1. Tiger’s motivation for leading FCC
New PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp has praised Woods for his willingness to serve as chair of the Future Competitions Committee to help shape the PGA Tour’s future.
The 15-time major champion and 82-time PGA Tour winner has a chance to write the final chapter of his enduring legacy by helping rewrite what the PGA Tour looks like. That has included, according to Woods, countless meetings and long nights of “free-flowing ideas” as he and the rest of the board try to map out the future.
For Woods, now 50, it was important that he, like Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus before him, play a role in bettering the Tour that has given him so much and ensuring the next wave of stars has a Tour they can succeed on.
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“Well, Jack and Arnold actually created the PGA Tour when we broke off,” Woods told Nantz when asked about why it was important to him to help reshape the Tour. “We were in a very difficult time when I came on the board and trying to reshape the Tour and get it to where our Tour had the best players in the world playing here. It was a difficult time. We have gotten over hump, we’ve got some momentum going and now we’ve got to keep that momentum going. I’m part of chairing the FCC and creating that momentum and taking it into the next generation, starting in 2027.”
Trevor Immelman asked Woods how he has gone from being focused on winning and setting records to now focusing on bettering the PGA Tour for the future. Woods thought back to his PGA Tour debut as a 16-year-old amateur at the LA Open, and noted it’s important to him that he leave the Tour better than he found it.
“I’m single-minded in a different way,” Woods said. “I’m single-minded for that little kid who teed off in 1992 in the LA Open. I’m single-minded for the opportunity for them to play the PGA Tour. The PGA Tour gave me an opportunity. I’m trying to give the next generation the same opportunity.
“We want to keep elevating our Tour so it can be even better than it is right now.”
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Restructuring the PGA Tour schedule is a big part of the FCC’s mandate. Woods has said he has spoken with the CEOs and CFOs from each tournament sponsor, as well as the PGA Tour’s media partners, and all are willing to move things around as needed. The hope is that many of the changes will go into effect in 2027.
2. Tiger on Rory’s Grand Slam, chances to repeat at the Masters
Prior to McIlroy’s thrilling 2025 Masters win, Woods was the last man to complete the career Grand Slam. He completed the career Grand Slam at the age of 24, when he won the 2000 Open Championship at St. Andrews.
It took McIlroy much longer. The Northern Irishman watched the scars pile up as his decade-plus major drought went on, but Woods always felt he’d triumph at Augusta National.
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“I got lucky. I was able to get mine out of the way when I was young,” Woods told Nantz and Immelman about watching McIlroy’s moment. “Rory’s situation was, he had so many different opportunities and we always thought, of all the places he was going to win it was going to be Augusta National. The last time he had an opportunity there it was a tough situation. He learned from it. We always thought he was going to get it done. But as years go by it gets harder and harder. But eventually he got it done. It was a big moment to watch him become a career Grand Slam champion.”
McIlroy will return to Augusta as the defending champion, looking to join Woods, Nicklaus and Nick Faldo as the only players to successfully repeat at the Masters. Woods understands it’s a tall task, but he also knows that winning at Augusta gives you the confidence that you can do it again. McIlroy now has that.
“It’s not easy,” Woods said. “But once you’ve done it, you understand that you can win and you know what it takes to get it done.”
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Tiger Woods
3. Tiger’s ‘most nerve-wracking tee shot’
The Genesis Invitational, which Woods now hosts, holds a special place in the 15-time major winner’s heart. With Woods in the booth for almost an hour, CBS took the opportunity to play a clip from Woods’ debut at the 1992 LA Open, where a 16-year-old Woods teed off in front of Sam Snead.
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“I was playing the pro-am there and that was one of the most nerve-wracking tee shots that I’ve ever hit,” Woods said. “To see the great Sam Snead right behind me, just staring right into me.”
Woods would go on to tie Snead’s record of 82 PGA Tour wins, adding to the importance the Southern California event holds for Woods.
“The synergy of this place and the things that have happened in my life, you couldn’t imagine,” Woods said.
4. Woods’ advice to tame Riviera’s greens
The greens at Riviera Country Club have given the game’s best fits this week. The Los Angeles area got a decent amount of rain early in the week, which has softened them up without them losing much speed.
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Collin Morikawa said they were “hit and hope” greens after Thursday’s first round. On Saturday, Woods explained how the mixture of soft but fast Poa annua greens can play mind tricks.
“You get some interesting putts out here with how fast they are,” Woods said. “But you don’t equate soft greens to fast greens. So that mentality is, ‘Oh, my 5-wood is backing up on the green or my 4-iron is backing up,’ but to then have to drip a putt in is so difficult mentally.”
To Woods, the key is to commit to your speed and eliminate the “pinko board” effect that can occur on bumpy Poa greens.
“The downhill putts, obviously, you’re going to be dripping. But if I’m putting uphill, I’m smoking it,” Woods said. “It’s committing to the fact that if you have an uphill putt or a flat putt, I don’t mind having two or three feet coming back. But I don’t want — the greens have that plinko effect and that can happen if you happen not to be committed to your speed, so anytime I have a chance to rip one into the back of the hole, I would.”
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