Injured Woods withdraws from Players Championship

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Florida, (Reuters) – Tiger Woods’  troubles continued as he withdrew from the Players Championship  yesterday through injury after slipping to six over par after  the opening nine holes.

It is the second successive year that the former world  number one has pulled out of the tournament — he withdrew from  the final round last year, after six holes, due to a neck  injury.

The 14-times major winner came into the Players, known as  the ‘fifth major’, after suffering knee and Achilles tendon  injuries and said he had hurt himself on the first tee shot.

“The knee acted up and then the Achilles followed after that  and then the calf started cramping up. Everything started  getting tight, so it’s just a whole chain reaction,” he told  reporters.

“This morning, it felt fine during warm-up and then as I  played it got progressively worse,” said Woods.

Asked how bad the pain was, he added: “I’m having a hard  time walking”.  After bogeying the first hole, he found water twice at the  par-four fourth where he ended with a triple bogey.

Further bogeys came on the fifth and ninth holes for Woods,  who walked slowly and deliberately on the final holes before  quitting. He missed last week’s tournament at Quail Hollow due to  injury and on Tuesday played his first nine holes since last  month’s Masters — where he picked up the knee ligament injury  during the third round.

Woods conceded he might have been wiser to withdraw earlier  on Thursday rather than battle to the turn but said he had been  given the go-ahead to play at TPC Sawgrass from his doctors.

“They said I could play. The more rest I get, the better it  would be, obviously.

“It’s a big event. I wanted to come back for it and play and  unfortunately I wasn’t able to finish,” he said.

Woods’ latest setback comes barely a month before the U.S.  Open at the Congressional Country Club in Maryland.

Having missed out at Augusta, Woods had been targeting the  U.S. Open, which he has won three times, as a chance to get back  to winning ways in the majors.

But now his future plans look very uncertain and he said it  was too early to discuss them.

“I don’t know. I just finished nine holes. Give me a few  days to see what the docs say and we’ll take a look at it,” he  said.