Tiger Woods celebrates after his two-stroke victory at the World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship at the Trump Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Doral, Florida on Sunday. Scott Halleran / Getty Images
Tiger Woods celebrates after his two-stroke victory at the World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship at the Trump Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Doral, Florida on Sunday. Scott Halleran / Getty Images
Tiger Woods celebrates after his two-stroke victory at the World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship at the Trump Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Doral, Florida on Sunday. Scott Halleran / Getty Images
Tiger Woods celebrates after his two-stroke victory at the World Golf Championships-Cadillac Championship at the Trump Doral Golf Resort & Spa in Doral, Florida on Sunday. Scott Halleran / Getty Image

Golf: Tiger Woods is getting his groove back


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Most of the gushing centred on his game, for legitimate and myriad reasons.

It had been years since Tiger Woods seemed so comfortably in control of his game. He made the Cadillac Championship look like a one-man drag race, and he was never seriously threatened.

In this Cadillac, there were no fire hydrants or oak trees in his path. And that could represent the last wisecrack about his epic fall from grace, because it is starting to seem like it never happened.

His performance was only part of the equation last weekend outside Miami, in concert with his familiar, undefinable command of the field based on sheer aura.

All but absent as he slipped down the world rankings while cleaning up the toxic details of his messy personal life, Woods is back in charge of the class in more ways than one. Stagger has been replaced by swagger, and we have all seen how that plot line plays out.

He has amassed two wins before the Masters for the first time in five years. But this is about the most crucial intangible once associated with Woods.

As the embarrassing tournament results piled up over a 30-month winless stretch that ended last March, his trademark red shirt on Sundays became little more than some a personal, pitiable touchstone to a reputation that had been squandered through hubris and excess.

Two years ago, as Woods posted numbers that prompted cringes and snickers, players openly acknowledged that the impenetrable image of the game's best player was long gone.

"What it means to him is obviously a different thing," Graeme McDowell said in 2011 of Woods's trademark Sunday attire. "What it means to the rest of us - it's not really something to be intimidated by anymore."

As it turns out, red isn't dead. The most notable part of his performance at Doral was not that he used a career-low 100 putts, or did not hit any wild tee shots.

It was that, just like old times, not a single soul in the field made a run at him. Woods easily closed out a 54-hole lead for the 51st time in 55 career chances on the US tour.

Woods is fast regaining the psychological advantage that had many guys beaten before he stepped on the first tee. "His attitude and what I saw this week and his belief in himself again looks very similar to the early 2000s, or you can pick any year when he was playing great," said Steve Stricker, who finished second. "He just seems in a better place, mentally, to me."

A better question: Where are his adversaries, mentally, now that the Woods ambiance is back in balance? We might already know the answer.

Surianah's top five jazz artists

Billie Holliday: for the burn and also the way she told stories.  

Thelonius Monk: for his earnestness.

Duke Ellington: for his edge and spirituality.

Louis Armstrong: his legacy is undeniable. He is considered as one of the most revolutionary and influential musicians.

Terence Blanchard: very political - a lot of jazz musicians are making protest music right now.

The Facility’s Versatility

Between the start of the 2020 IPL on September 20, and the end of the Pakistan Super League this coming Thursday, the Zayed Cricket Stadium has had an unprecedented amount of traffic.
Never before has a ground in this country – or perhaps anywhere in the world – had such a volume of major-match cricket.
And yet scoring has remained high, and Abu Dhabi has seen some classic encounters in every format of the game.
 
October 18, IPL, Kolkata Knight Riders tied with Sunrisers Hyderabad
The two playoff-chasing sides put on 163 apiece, before Kolkata went on to win the Super Over
 
January 8, ODI, UAE beat Ireland by six wickets
A century by CP Rizwan underpinned one of UAE’s greatest ever wins, as they chased 270 to win with an over to spare
 
February 6, T10, Northern Warriors beat Delhi Bulls by eight wickets
The final of the T10 was chiefly memorable for a ferocious over of fast bowling from Fidel Edwards to Nicholas Pooran
 
March 14, Test, Afghanistan beat Zimbabwe by six wickets
Eleven wickets for Rashid Khan, 1,305 runs scored in five days, and a last session finish
 
June 17, PSL, Islamabad United beat Peshawar Zalmi by 15 runs
Usman Khawaja scored a hundred as Islamabad posted the highest score ever by a Pakistan team in T20 cricket

LA LIGA FIXTURES

Friday Celta Vigo v Villarreal (midnight kick-off UAE)

Saturday Sevilla v Real Sociedad (4pm), Atletico Madrid v Athletic Bilbao (7.15pm), Granada v Barcelona (9.30pm), Osasuna v Real Madrid (midnight)

Sunday Levante v Eibar (4pm), Cadiz v Alaves (7.15pm), Elche v Getafe (9.30pm), Real Valladolid v Valencia (midnight)

Monday Huesca v Real Betis (midnight)