When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
SI: Reliving The Tiger Drop, One More Time
/Nantz: "I’ve never had anybody say, ‘Tell me about the ratings when Jack Nicklaus won in 1986.'"
/Too Late For Tiger: Phil Says Light Therapy Helps Him
/Hank On Tiger: "I think it is just a question of how much is he going to practice, how hard is he going to work?"
/Quick Roundup: Tiger's Pre-Masters Back Surgery
/Flashback: Graham DeLaet Had The Same Surgery As Tiger
/Video: Before You See It On The Daily Show, Doctor Talks Tiger's Back, Jelly Donuts
/Not April Fool's: Tiger Has Surgery, Out Of Masters
/Exclusive: Brandel Chamblee Joins Tiger's Team For Masters
/GMac On Tiger: “He’s lost that sort of force field of invincibility around him"
/Brandel: "Tiger may have been born to play golf, but it seems he was also born to build and destroy."
/Brandel Chamblee is back and not handing out any letter grades, but instead focusing on Tiger's desire to rebuild his swing for an Athlon Sports piece.
Chamblee says history will look upon Woods swing "by the year or vintage, the way one talks about great wines."
Because the Tiger Woods of 1997 was vastly different in form from the Tiger Woods of 2000, and different yet again in 2007, and different still today in 2014. Among his mind-blowing accomplishments, ascending to the number one spot in the world and dominating the world of professional golf with four completely different swings might be the most “in your face" feat ever achieved in sport.
Tiger may have been born to play golf, but it seems he was also born to build and destroy.
Michael Jordan worked harder than his peers to improve his form, but the mechanics he used to score over 3,000 points in the 1986-87 season looked essentially identical to those he used to hit a jumper with 5.2 seconds left to clinch the NBA Championship for the Bulls against the Utah Jazz in Game 6 of the 1998 Finals. Gordie Howe played professional hockey in five different decades, and in his 2,421st game, his style was just as recognizable as it was in his rookie season of 1946. Imagine if either of these athletes, after being colossally successful early in their careers, had completely changed the way they played their respective sports — not once, but four times, and after each change became the best again. It would just never happen, not once, let alone four times.

