Tiger Woods needs no introduction to golf fans and indeed sports fans, with the legendary figure one of the all-time greats.
Woods boasts 82 PGA Tour wins from his phenomenal career, which includes 15 major championship wins.
Unfortunately the American icon hasn’t been able to add to those tallies in recent times due to injury, although Woods could soon play on the PGA Tour Champions.
He’s been struggling with injuries throughout his entire career, but this season alone has undergone back and Achilles surgery.

When Tiger Woods made his highest score ever on one hole on the PGA Tour
Woods deserves a PGA Tour award in his honor given his efforts and indeed commitment over the years, which hopefully are not over just yet.
But even the 82-time champion wasn’t immune to a bad hole or two, with the worst of his entire career arriving at The Masters in 2020.
Woods entered the major championship with five titles to his name, having clinched the green jacket in 2019.
But he could only manage a T38 finish at Augusta National, which was heavily influenced by a septuple-bogey 10 on the par-3 12th in his final round.
He fired three balls into the water en route to the highest score of his PGA Tour career, although he was able to recover in true Woods fashion.
Not to be deterred by making unwanted career history, the legendary figure birdied Augusta National’s last four holes for the first time in his career.
What Tiger Woods said his big mistake was after his septuple-bogey 10
Woods ended his Sunday at The Masters with a 76, his worst round of the week after scores of 68, 71 and 72.
It resulted in a 1-under total for the icon, with his fellow American Dustin Johnson claiming the title on 20-under.
Speaking of the disaster though, Woods said at the time: “I committed to the wrong wind. The wind was off the right for the first two guys, and then when I stepped up there, it switched to howling off the left, which… and the flag on 11 was howling off the left.
“I didn’t commit to the wind, and I also got ahead of it and pushed it, too, because I thought the wind would come more off the right and it was off the left, and that just started the problem from there.
“From there I hit a lot more shots and had a lot more experiences there in Rae’s Creek, and then as you said, this is unlike any other sport in which you’re so alone out there and you have to figure it out and you have to fight and no one is going to pull you off the bump and you just have to figure it out, and I did coming in.”
He unfortunately overtook his previous high score at the iconic course, having made an 8 on the eighth hole in 1999 and again on the 15th in 2013.
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