Tiger's Frys.com Presser Roundup

Yet another Tiger press conference, another comeback and plenty of takes on his performance as he prepares to tee off in the Frys.com Open (I'll be tweeting from the course...you've been warned.)

My take on Wednesday's presser and what this week means in the Tiger era.

GolfDigest.com's slideshow of Tigerisms included a few that were repeated Wednesday.

Doug Ferguson noted this about one of Tiger's playing partners Thursday.

He will play the opening two rounds with UCLA sophomore Patrick Cantlay, the low amateur at the U.S. Open who shot a 60 at the Travelers Championship a week later and was leading going into the weekend.

Cantlay at least met Woods on Tuesday when they played together in an outing at The Institute, the course where Fry's Electronics wants to eventually take its tournament.

''He was real cordial and real nice, and we joked around a little bit out there and had a good time,'' Cantlay said.

Steve DiMeglio sums up the highlights (it's the reps!) and notes this impact Tiger has had on the tournament:

And this is the first start for Woods in a Fall Series event, which has triggered an energetic response in this neck of the Golden State. Ticket sales are expected to more than double from 30,000 last year to 70,000. Media credentials tripled — from 100 to 300. Other increases included those in parking spaces (doubled), shuttle buses, security and corporate packages. And advertising and marketing — giant billboards featuring defending champion Rocco Mediate and Woods are towering over nearby Interstate 101 — were bumped significantly.

Steve Elling says with Tiger's pronouncements Wednesday, the expectations are high for round one.

But now that he pronounced himself healthier than he's been in years, and had time to dial in his game with eight to 10 hours of daily work, we should get a telling glimpse this week into whether he's still got the goods.

"Basically the lead leg is better than it's been at least three years," Foley said. "What he's able to do is put the reps in. People go, 'Oh the reps thing again.' Listen to any human-motion expert. The reps is the reps.

"When you have so many starts and stops because you're injured and there is a lack of continuity, it's very easy for the brain to go back to its most familiar pattern. There's no way around that."

Bob Harig is not sure the "reps" will translate to the golf course.

Whether that translates to tournament golf is another matter. Woods will never relent from his mantra that he enters to win, but the truth is he's completed just six rounds of competitive golf since the Masters. There's got to be some competitive rust to deal with. Although the Frys.com Open field is not of the high caliber he is used to competing against (even though Woods has dropped to 51st in the world, he's the fourth-highest ranked player here this week), Woods should not be expected to have his way.

Tournament officials say ticket sales have increased by 40 percent over last year's event won by Rocco Mediate and media interest required some juggling at CordeValle. October golf tournaments following the Tour Championship don't get much attention, but Woods has changed all that.

Harig also talks to Joe LaCava, who talks about the move to Tiger's bag from Dustin Johnson's.

"[Johnson] is a great player and a great kid. He was fantastic to me. He couldn't have been any nicer. He played great. The guy won a tournament, finished second, finished fourth in four months. The kid can play. There's no comparison between the two as far as that, it's just that it's Tiger Woods.''

And finally, Jeff Rude sums it all up:

Talk is one thing. Action is another. We’ve seen this over and over in golf, with Woods and other major champions whose careers hit major bumps. Despite optimism, you’re never sure exactly what you’re going to get.