Sun.Star Cebu

Tiger’s pursuit resumes at Riviera

- DOUG FERGUSON / AP Golf Writer

LOS ANGELES —There is no better place for Tiger Woods to set the PGA Tour record for most career victories than at Riviera. Because this is where he played his first PGA Tour event as a 16-year-old amateur?

No.

Because he now is tournament host of the Genesis Invitation­al, giving it the kind of elevated status — smaller field, bigger purse — enjoyed only by Jack Nicklaus at the Memorial and the late Arnold Palmer at Bay Hill?

Not necessaril­y.

Because it’s the course Woods has played the most times — 10 as a profession­al — without ever having won and he’s due?

Not at all.

What makes Riviera ideal is because it’s the next one on his schedule. And the sooner Woods can win No. 83 to break the record he shares with Sam Snead, the sooner everyone can stop speculatin­g about the inevitable.

The question came up Tuesday — how could it not? — about how special it would be for Woods to set the record at Riviera. He interjecte­d by saying with a smile, “Yes, that’s been mentioned.”

It was mentioned three weeks ago at Torrey Pines when he started the new year, and that made just as much sense. Torrey Pines was the first PGA Tour event he attended with his father, the course where he won eight times, including that 2008 U.S. Open that he played with a double stress fracture and shredded knee ligaments.

Then again, Woods has left such an enormous trail in golf that winning anywhere would have some historical perspectiv­e.

It could be Bay Hill, where he has won eight times. Maybe the Masters, where he could set the record and tie Jack Nicklaus with a sixth green jacket. The U.S. Open is at Winged Foot, the first major he played after his father died and the first cut he ever missed in a major.

It’s a long list.

Woods hasn’t decided where he is playing or even how much this year — even the Mexico Championsh­ip next week remains up in the air — but odds are he will have won every tournament on his schedule except L.A.

Oddly enough, what made the career record feel so inevitable was a tournament he had never played.

Winning the Tour Championsh­ip (for the third time) at the end of the 2018 season was the first step in his comeback from four back surgeries. Winning the Masters (for the fifth time) made the comeback complete, for it was his first major after a drought of nearly 11 years.

But it was when he returned from a fifth knee surgery — this one the maintenanc­e variety — and played the ZoZo Championsh­ip in Japan where he showed such a comfort level with his swing and with his game that more victories seemed certain to follow.

So how about now?

“I’ve played in a number of events over the years, and for me not to win an event that has meant so much to me in my hometown ... I’ve done well in San Diego, I’ve done well at Sherwood, just haven’t done well here,” Woods said. “So hopefully, I can put it together this week and we’ll have a great conversati­on on Sunday.”

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