Every season contains questions, yet every answer winds its way back to one player---Tiger Woods with LPGA Tour tee-off.
Pat Perez was asked for his list of questions about 2010 on the PGA Tour, and he wasted no time rattling off two of them.
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“When is Tiger coming back?†he said. “And where the hell is he?â€
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That’s a good place to start on a few questions for the new season:
1. When will Woods appear?
Considering that a healthy Woods has started every season at Torrey Pines since 2006, the “indefinite break†really doesn’t start until he doesn’t show up at the San Diego Open starting Jan. 28.
Woods had planned on playing the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am on Feb. 11, especially since Poppy Hills was replaced in the course rotation by Monterey Peninsula, the field was reduced from 180 to 156 players, the U.S. Open is returning to Pebble Beach in June and Woods carried the AT&T logo on his golf bag.
That was before AT&T ended its endorsement deal with him, and it was agreed that Woods no longer would be the host of the AT&T National this summer outside Philadelphia, a tournament that benefits his foundation.
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Accenture dropped him too, making it unlikely he would return to the Match Play Championship toward the end of February. Woods returned from his knee surgery at Match Play, and his relationship with Accenture played a part in that.
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Speculation has shifted to the Florida swing – either Doral or Bay Hill, as a tuneup for the Masters. But that assumes he will play in the Masters. Would he really skip Augusta National? Maybe. Could he possibly skip majors at Pebble and St. Andrews? Could he return to Torrey Pines – next year?
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To borrow a slogan from the PGA Tour, anything is possible.
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2. Can the Americans win another Ryder Cup?
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Tom Watson, who turned 60 in September, is No. 6 in the Ryder Cup standings going into the year. That’s because points in a non-Ryder Cup year only are awarded at the majors. David Duval is No. 8.
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The Americans are defending champions for the first time in eight years, and U.S. captain Corey Pavin has extra large shoes to fill after the job Paul Azinger did in 2008 at Valhalla. Europe is led by Colin Montgomerie, who believes the Ryder Cup is bigger than majors and can only hope he gets a better outcome.
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It will be played the first weekend in October in Wales, and past captain Nick Faldo wasn’t kidding when he reminded everyone at closing ceremonies in 2008 to bring rain gear.
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The big question: Will the Americans bring the No. 1 player?
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Woods has tolerated the Ryder Cup more than he has enjoyed it. Even if he has returned to competition, his family crisis might be a good excuse for him to sit this one out. Besides, the Americans did just fine without him last time.
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3. What will Phil do next?
The way Phil Mickelson ended last year, he appeared poised to make a run at several milestones – winning a money title, player of the year and reaching No. 1 in the world, none of which he has ever achieved in an otherwise stellar career.
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His wife continues her recovery from breast cancer, which has allayed fears at home, and Mickelson regained his putting touch with the help of Dave Stockton. And with Woods out of the picture indefinitely (whatever that means), it would seem the stars are aligned.
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Strangely, though, Mickelson is one of the few players who thrives on competition with Woods. He did next to nothing at the tail end of 2008 when Woods was out with knee surgery, and didn’t win on the PGA Tour until the week Woods announced his return.
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He won Doral with Woods in the field, outplayed him in their final round pairing at the Masters, outplayed him at the U.S. Open, then ended the year by beating him in consecutive tournaments at the Tour Championship and in Shanghai.
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