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Tiger Woods is helped into his fifth green jacket by 2018 winner Patrick Reed. Photo: Kyodo
Opinion
Jonathan White
Jonathan White

Tiger Woods wins Masters: where does this rank in history’s greatest comebacks?

  • The 43-year-old wins at Augusta for first time in 14 years to cap career renaissance
  • Fifth green jacket comes 22 years after his first

On Sunday night in Augusta, Georgia, Tiger Woods put on that famous green jacket for the fifth time.

The measurements will have changed since 2005, but Woods being 43 is not why this win is remarkable.

There are many champion golfers who are long in the tooth, but the distance between his 14th and 15th major is at the heart of this.

That and what happened in those 11 years.

The list of injuries he has endured seem more suited to a contact sport, while insult was added as his private life publicly spiralled out of control.

Woods had already won the World Comeback of the Year category at the Laureus Sports Awards in February, but victory was a sign of how far he had fallen since winning the 2008 US Open.

Less than 18 months ago, Woods was ranked 1,199th in the world. Last year, he finished in the top 10 in The Open Championship and the PGA before winning a first tournament in five years, the season-ending Tour Championship.

Andre Agassi hugs Rafael Nadal after their third-round match at Wimbledon in 2006. Photo: AP

This saw him rise up the rankings, ending the year in 13th. He is now sixth after the Masters win.

The redemption was deeper for the reason that this was where Woods burst onto the scene in 1997 as a 21-year-old and blew the cobwebs off the golf world.

“That ought to wake up the country club,” was Nike’s tagline for Andre Agassi earlier in the decade, as another young man defying tradition in a stuffy sport.

Poster boy Agassi finished 1996 as world number one but a year later he was 141st, barely lifting a racquet over the previous 12 months as he battled his demons.

Roger Federer celebrates after winning the 2018 Australian Open. Photo: Xinhua

By 1999, he was on the road to redemption, lifting the French Open title after being two sets to love down to Russia’s Andriy Medvedev.

He won the US Open that year to top the rankings before winning three of the next four Australian Opens, only retiring in 2006.

Roger Federer won the Laureus comeback award for 2018 after winning the 2017 Australian Open. The Swiss superstar had missed the latter half of the 2016 season through injury and little was expected of a player ranked 17th in the world that had not won in five trips to Melbourne.

Serena Williams in action at Indian Wells in March, 2019. Photo: AFP

But win he did and in a five-set thriller against Rafael Nadal. Federer then went on to win Wimbledon before retaining his Australian Open crown in 2018, extending his record of slam singles titles to 20. Is that more impressive than Woods?

The women’s game has its triumphs over adversity. Margaret Court leads the way for most slams in either men’s or women’s singles with 24 and 11 of those came after she retired for the first time at 24 in 1966. She won a calendar grand slam in 1970 and continued to win majors despite career breaks to give birth to two children.

Serena Williams is one off Court’s record and if she does match it then it will come after returning from giving birth, and nearly losing her life in doing so. She has reached a slam final since and if she does win one then it will match Kim Clijsters, the last mother to win a slam.

Czech Republic’s Petra Kvitova after her defeat against Naomi Osaka in the Australian Open final. Photo: AFP

In 1993, world number one Monica Seles was stabbed on court in an attack that kept her out for two years. She reached the US Open final in 1995 before winning the Australian Open the following year. She never won another major, but did reach two more finals before retiring.

Current number three Petra Kvitova has a sadly similar tale, missing half a year after being stabbed in the hand in her home by a burglar. She reached this year’s Australian Open final.

Greg LeMond came back from a life-threatening hunting accident to win the Tour de France; golfer Ben Hogan was in a head-on smash with a bus, but went on to win three more majors; while Niki Lauda suffered horrific burns after crashing at the Nurburgring in 1976, but won the F1 driver’s championship the next year and another in 1984.

Anthony Crolla looks dejected after losing to Jorge Linares in 2017. Photo: Reuters

Boxer Anthony Crolla suffered a serious head injury after he disturbed burglars at his neighbour’s home in Manchester in 2014. There were fears he would never fight again, but last Friday he had the biggest fight of his career when he met Vasyl Lomachenko for the WBA and WBO flyweight belts in Los Angeles.

While there are thousands of examples of comebacks in team sports – over the course of a single match, a season, or an entire career – it is more difficult to come back in an individual sport where there is nowhere to hide.

There is certainly nowhere to hide in the boxing ring – as Crolla found out on Friday – and some will say that is where the comebacks to rival Woods truly lie.

Muhammad Ali watches as defending world champion George Foreman goes down to the canvas in the eighth round of the “Rumble in the Jungle”. Photo: AP

George Foreman retired from boxing in 1977 only to return a decade later. After two attempts to win a world title, redemption came in 1994 as Foreman, days off his 46th birthday, won back his title 20 years after losing it.

The man who had taken it from him, Muhammad Ali, himself came back from missing three years of his career for refusing to fight in the Vietnam war, but it took until 1974’s Rumble in the Jungle for him to return to the top of the sport.

Politics is arguably the hardest thing for an athlete to overcome – if anyone is going to challenge Woods for the greatest comeback in sports then keep an eye on Colin Kaepernick. Now that would be against the odds.

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