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Tiger Woods, now with nine career majors, seems to be approaching a full understanding of where he wants to be with his swing, which has been retooled over the past two years. In the News
The Master of Suspense: Woods Beats DiMarco In Playoff to Cap Wild Day (Post, April 11, 2005)
A Master Reappears At Augusta: Woods Wins His First Golf Major in 21/2 Years (Post, April 11, 2005) Moore's Effort Isn't Amateurish (Post, April 11, 2005) Woods Blazes to Final-Round Lead at Masters in Traditional Tiger Fashion (Post, April 10, 2005; 12:17 PM) DiMarco Leads, but Woods Is Looming: Third Round Halted Because of Darkness (Post, April 10, 2005) Nicklaus's 45th Appearance Likely Is His Last (Post, April 10, 2005) Field Takes On More Water At the Masters: DiMarco Is 18-Hole Leader; 2nd Round to Resume Today (Post, April 9, 2005) Singh's Complaint Rankles Mickelson (Post, April 9, 2005) When It Rains, It Pours at The Masters (Post, April 8, 2005) Burk Targets Sponsors' Discrimination Policies (Post, April 8, 2005) Five Stars Are on a Collision Course (Post, April 7, 2005) Johnson Silent on Women: 'We Don't Talk About Club Matters' (Post, April 7, 2005) Singh Is Enjoying the View From Top: World No. 1 Is Content With His Game, Life (Post, April 6, 2005) Nicklaus Says He'll Play Again (Post, April 6, 2005) Governing Bodies Sidestep Rules for Masters: Despite Prohibition of Holding Events at Augusta, Steward Group Members Attend, Help Run Tournament (Post, April 5, 2005)
Usually the difference between winning and losing is wide enough that we can cling to the notion that the winner was incontrovertibly "better" than the loser. But at the Masters, there were two convincing performances and the difference between luck and skill was indistinct.
Persevering through a grueling day of 28 holes of trying Augusta National golf while dealing with the illness of his father, Tiger Woods shows fallibility with brilliance. More Boswell Columns
Why Tiger Will Win With his swing adjustments from last year finally paying off, Tiger Woods stands to win his fourth green jacket. © 2002-2005 The Washington Post Company |
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