Tiger Woods is no stranger to comebacks, but the path ahead may be his steepest yet. Preparing to turn 50 later this month, Woods is recovering from both a recent back surgery — a lumbar disc replacement performed in October — and a ruptured Achilles tendon suffered earlier in the year. The 15-time major champion has only just returned to light practice and admits the timeline for a competitive return is still unclear.
Speaking at the Hero World Challenge, the annual invitational he hosts in the Bahamas, Woods said he had only last week been cleared to chip, putt and resume limited gym sessions. While progress is underway, the pace has been slower than he hoped.
“I just started this process,” Woods said. “A disc replacement takes time. It’s not as long as a fusion, thank God, but it’s going to take time.”
Tiger acknowledged that at 50, he must be more conservative in his rehabilitation and avoid pushing for rapid results, especially after the rupture of his left Achilles tendon in March required another lengthy recovery phase.
“It’s not going as fast as I’d like,” he admitted, recognizing that the combination of back and Achilles injuries requires caution rather than urgency.
Return Still Uncertain
Woods has not competed since The Open Championship in July and played only five events in 2025 — making just one cut, at the Masters. A full return to the PGA Tour is unlikely in the near term. Even the TGL indoor league and the PNC Championship with his son Charlie — both previously realistic goals — are currently off the table.
With eligibility for the PGA TOUR Champions arriving next year, Woods hinted that the circuit’s three-round format and use of golf carts could provide a gentler competitive path. But even that requires physical readiness he doesn’t yet have.
“Let me get back to playing again, and then I’ll figure out what the schedule is going to be,” he said.
The Major Record Question
For decades, Woods’ pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’ record 18 major championships has shaped his legend. His emotional win at Augusta in 2019 — Major No. 15 — reopened the door to history. But since then, surgeries, setbacks and the after-effects of his 2021 car accident have reshaped the conversation.
Nicklaus himself believes the chase has realistically ended.
“If he remained healthy, I think he would’ve gotten it, but he didn’t remain healthy,” Nicklaus has said. “I feel bad for him about it, but it is what it is.”
Three more major titles — once seen as destiny — now feel improbable. But Woods’ influence remains unmatched, and every return carries the aura of possibility.
Legacy Beyond Scores
Woods says his motivation now is simpler and more personal.
“I’d like to come back to just playing golf again,” he said. “I haven’t played golf in a long time. It’s been a tough year.”
Whether or not another major waits in the distance, Tiger Woods remains the sport’s most compelling story — a champion fighting time, pain, and history with the same intensity that once made him unbeatable.
And as long as he swings a club, golf fans worldwide will continue to believe that magic might strike one more time.



















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