Golf

Tiger Woods undergoes surgery for leg injuries suffered in California car crash

Golf star Tiger Woods suffered leg injuries Tuesday in a vehicle rollover in the Los Angeles area and is undergoing surgery, authorities and his manager said.

Golf star taken to hospital with serious injuries after being extricated from vehicle

The vehicle Woods was driving Tuesday morning lies on the side of the road in Los Angeles. (KABC-TV/The Associated Press)

Tiger Woods was in the driver's seat of a mangled SUV that rolled and ended up on its side down a steep roadway in the Los Angeles suburbs Tuesday morning, seatbelt still fastened, both legs seriously injured.

He was lucid enough to give his name —"Tiger" — to the sheriff's deputy who had poked his head through a hole in the windshield.

"At that moment, it clicked in my mind and I immediately recognized him as Tiger Woods," Los Angeles County Sheriff's Deputy Carlos Gonzalez said Tuesday.

The single-car crash was another setback for Woods, the preeminent golfer of his generation who has spent the last decade in a cycle of injuries, self-inflicted personal problems and an arrest for DUI. Each time, he returned to the course and won.

Dr. Anish Mahajan, the chief medical officer at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, said Woods shattered the tibia and fibula bones of his lower right leg in multiple locations. Those injuries were stabilized with a rod in the tibia. Additional injuries to the bones in the foot and ankle required screws and pins, Mahajan said in a statement released on Woods' Twitter account late Tuesday night.

The lengthy surgery also reduced swelling. Woods was awake and recovering in his hospital room, the statement said.

WATCH | Woods suffers leg injuries in car crash:

Tiger Woods hospitalized after car crash

4 years ago
Duration 2:02
Golf superstar Tiger Woods needed surgery after a car crash in Los Angeles on Tuesday that left him with multiple leg injuries. Officials say he was conscious when pulled from the wrecked SUV and the injuries are not life threatening.

Woods was alone in the SUV when it crashed into a raised median, crossed two oncoming lanes and rolled several times, authorities said at a news conference. Police said Woods was alert and able to communicate as firefighters pried open the front windshield to get him out.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva said the airbags deployed and the inside of the SUV stayed mostly intact, which "gave him a cushion to survive the crash."

There was no immediate evidence that Woods was impaired. Authorities said they checked for any odour of alcohol or other signs he was under the influence of a substance and found none. They didn't say how fast he was driving.

Even at 45, Woods is among the more recognizable sports figures in the world and is sports' biggest draw. His 2019 Masters victory was seen as a transcendent comeback and further cemented his reputation for toughness and clutch performances. Briefly Tuesday, the world paused and worried that Woods might be critically injured or worse. As it became clear that his life wasn't in danger, the obvious question came out: Can he golf again?

"As if his body hasn't endured enough," Jon Rahm, the No. 2 player in the world, said from the Workday Championship in Florida. "I just hope he can get out of the hospital after recovery and he can still play with his kids and have a normal life."

WATCH | Vehicle interior prevented fatal crash, sheriff says:

Interior of Tiger Woods' car may have saved him from fatal crash

4 years ago
Duration 1:07
Los Angeles County Sheriff Alejandro Villanueva says the interior of Tiger Woods' car acted as a cushion to survive "what otherwise would have been a fatal crash."

No charges were filed and no one else was injured.

It was the 10th surgery for Woods, who has suffered knee, back and neck problems for more than a decade.

Woods was in Los Angeles over the weekend as tournament host of the Genesis Invitational that ended Sunday, and then to film content for his sponsor, Discovery-owned GolfTV. He was not playing while recovering from a fifth back surgery on Dec. 23.

'Very fortunate' 

The crash happened about 7:15 a.m. PT on a sweeping, downhill stretch of a two-lane road through upscale suburbs. Gonzalez, the first to get to the wreck, said he sometimes catches people topping 80 mph, roughly 128 km/h, in the 45 mph zone and crashes are common.

"I will say that it's very fortunate that Mr. Woods was able to come out of this alive," Gonzalez said.

Thoughts and prayers have come from everywhere — Jack Nicklaus and Michael Jordan, Mike Tyson, and former presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump, who has played golf with Woods and awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2019.

Woods, who shares with Sam Snead the PGA Tour record of 82 career victories, had said during the Genesis Invitational television broadcast that he was awaiting one more test from his Dec. 23 microdiscectomy surgery before learning if he could expand his work. Asked about playing the Masters on April 8-11, Woods replied, "God, I hope so."

WATCH | 'Probably the best player ever':

Canadian writer who collaborated with Tiger Woods speaks on the legendary golfer

4 years ago
Duration 12:32
Lorne Rubenstein, who co-authored "The 1997 Masters: My Story" with Tiger Woods, reflects on the golfer and the man.

Woods has carried the sport since his record-setting Masters victory in 1997 when he was 21, winning at the most prolific rate in modern PGA Tour history. He is singularly responsible for TV ratings spiking, which has led to enormous increases in prize money.

He feared he would never play again until fusion surgery on his lower spine in April 2017. He returned a year later, and won the 2018 Tour Championship.

He played patient, calculating golf as other contenders wilted on the final nine holes to win the 2019 Masters, his first major in 11 years. The previous one was the U.S. Open in 2008 at Torrey Pines, on a left leg with shredded knee ligaments and a double stress fracture. He had reconstructive surgery a few days later.

Woods last played Dec. 20 in the PNC Championship in Orlando, Fla., an unofficial event where players are paired with parents or children. He played with his son, Charlie, who is now 12. Woods also has a 13-year-old daughter, Samantha.

The news put a damper on the World Golf Championship in Florida, where Woods was eligible to play.

"I'm sick to my stomach," said Justin Thomas, No. 3 in the world and among the younger players whom Woods has embraced. "It hurts to see one of my closest friends get in an accident. Man, I just hope he's all right."

Woods has been recovering from Dec. 23 surgery on his lower back; his fifth back surgery and first since his lower spine was fused in April 2017. (Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

This is the third time Woods has been involved in a car investigation. The most notorious was the early morning after Thanksgiving in 2009, when his SUV ran over a fire hydrant and hit a tree. That was the start of shocking revelations that he had been cheating on his wife with multiple women. Woods lost major corporate sponsorships, went to a rehabilitation clinic in Mississippi and did not return to golf for five months.

In May 2017, Florida police found him asleep behind the wheel of a car parked awkwardly on the side of the road. He was arrested on a DUI charge and said later he had an unexpected reaction to prescription medicine for his back pain. Woods later pleaded guilty to reckless driving and checked into a clinic to get help with prescription medication and a sleep disorder.

Woods hasn't won since the Zozo Championship in Japan in fall 2019, and he's reduced his playing schedule in recent years because of injuries. Besides his back surgeries, he's had four surgeries on his left knee, including a major reconstruction after he won the 2008 U.S. Open.

Clarifications

  • The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department initially stated that Tiger Woods was extricated from his vehicle using the Jaws of Life. Fire Chief Darly Osby later told media an axe and Halligan tool were used to help pry Woods out of the vehicle, not the Jaws of Life.
    Feb 23, 2021 7:37 PM ET

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