Golf

Woods to play practice round at Augusta before potential Masters return: report

Five-time champion Tiger Woods will play a practice round at Augusta National Golf Club on Tuesday to determine whether he is fit to compete at next week's Masters, according to a Sports Illustrated report.

Has spent past 13 months rehabbing career-threatening leg injuries from car crash

Tiger Woods is pictured reacting to his 2019 Masters victory that followed years of surgery and personal problems. On Tuesday, he'll reportedly play a practice round at Augusta National Golf Club to determine whether he is fit to compete at this year’s event next week in Georgia after a February 2021 car crash. (Andrew Redington/Getty Images/File)

Five-time champion Tiger Woods will play a practice round at Augusta National Golf Club on Tuesday to determine whether he is fit to compete at next week's Masters, according to a Sports Illustrated report.

The report, which cited a source who did not want to be identified, said Woods arrived at the course in Georgia along with his 13-year-old son Charlie to evaluate his fitness on the hilly layout that will host the April 7-10 Masters.

The report came after online flight tracking websites said a plane belonging to Woods, who has been recovering from career-threatening leg injuries suffered in a February 2021 car crash, arrived at Augusta Regional Airport on Tuesday.

Woods said last month he had a "long way to go" in his recovery but recent reports have stated he was planning to visit Augusta National this week ahead of the year's first major.

While the 46-year-old Woods has not played a PGA Tour event since the Masters in November 2020, his playing status continues to dominate the build-up to the Masters.

As per tournament protocol, Woods' name will remain on the list of competitors that appear on the Masters website unless the 15-times major champion notifies Augusta National that he will not compete.

Undulating terrain taxing on body

Woods' only event since the single-car accident came last December when he finished runner-up alongside his son in a 36-hole exhibition played on a flat course with no rough.

Playing at Augusta National, however, represents one of the more taxing walks on the PGA Tour given its undulating terrain that all but guarantees that golfers will hit from any number of uneven lies during the week.

The Masters is the only one of golf's four majors played annually on the same course and so familiarity with the famed layout has always been considered an advantage.

Woods has made 23 Masters appearances and proven that even when his game is not at its sharpest, or if he is coming off a long layoff, he can contend at Augusta National.

In 2019, Woods capped one of the most remarkable comebacks in professional sport when, at the age of 43, he won the Masters after years of surgery and personal problems.

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