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(800) 823-7938 (503) 223-7938
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No surprise. Woods expects
to dominate at the Masters
uy i/uug, rci^usun
The Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. — If anyone in
the Masters is intimidated by Tiger
Woods, take heart. There was a
time when even Woods, the No. 1
player in the world, found himself
in awe of another player and won
dered whether he was good
enough to win.
“I was 11 years old,” he said
Tuesday.
Woods said he was paired with
a 12-year-old in a junior tourna
ment when they came to a 290
yard par 4. The big kid drove the
green, and ti ny Tiger took a gulp.
‘‘I was taken back by-that and
felt there was no way I could com
pete,” he said.
He wound up beating him that
day, and came away with a valu
able lesson.
“There’s no point being intimi
dated on the golf course,” Woods
said. “I know what I can accom
plish. I know what I can do on the
golf course. I know the shots I can
pull off, and I’ve got to believe I
can doit.”
Woods has made a believer out
of just about everyone lately.
He arrived at Augusta National
as a heavy favorite to win his sec
ond green jacket in four years, and
for good reason.
Woods has won 10 times since
last masters, ino one eise nas
won more than twice, while David
Duval, Ernie Els and Davis Love III
have combined to win nothing.
Who else since 1945 has won
six straight PGA Tour events? And
the most daunting performance of
all is that Woods has finished first
or second in 10 out of his 11
events.
Perhaps that’s why Woods did
n’t even blink when someone
asked him how it affected his
preparation for the Masters know
ing he was the guy everyone was
watching.
“People are talking about that
every week I play,” he said. “That
hasn’t changed. You become the
center of attention when you’re
playing well.”
One thing that has changed is
the course.
It is not the same Augusta Na
tional on which Woods romped in
1997 in becoming the youngest
Masters champion (21) with the
lowest score (270) for the largest
margin of victory (12 strokes),
among the 20 records he owns.
They move a couple of tee boxes
back 25 yards and grew rough for
the first time last year, which looks
more like peach fuzz compared to
the U.S. Open but is still enough of
a nuisance to lower the scoring.
This year, the rough has en
croached on what used to be the
most generous fairways in golf,
which changes the shape of drives
on some holes.
“You can’t go out there and take
driving for granted like you used
to around here,” Woods said. “You
have different angles. It’s going to
be quite a challenge.”
That was never more evident
than late Tuesday afternoon, when
six-time Masters champion Jack
Nicklaus and Greg Norman, play
ing in his 20th Masters, stood on
the 11th tee and tried to figure out
where to hit their drives.
Showing them the way was 19-,
year-old Aaron Baddeley, the Aus
tralian amateur who has been
coming to Augusta for, oh, about a
week now.
“The changes might not look
important from the outside, but
when you’re playing the course,
it’s quite different,” said defending
champion Jose Maria Olazabal.
Not everyone favors the new
look. Among the harshest critics is
Phil Mickelson, who is coming ofi
a playoff victory over Gary Nick
laus in Atlanta.
“I don’t think it’s the place oi
anybody who can’t break 90 to be
changing the golf course from
those original designs,” he said.
The change that might have the
biggest impact is what Woods has
done with his swing since he Iasi
won the Masters.
McGwire could play Wednesday
■ heeling better, Big Mac
said he expects to get back
into the lineup soon
By R.B. Fallstrom
The Associated Press
ST. LOUIS — A day after he
hobbled out of Busch Stadium
with his body contorted into an L
shape due to a lower back strain,
an upright Mark McGwire felt so
much better he was able to joke
about the injury.
I may be a hell of a manager
someday because that was a great
move by me taking myself out of
the lineup,” McGwire said Tues
day.
His replacement at first, Craig Pa
quette, hit a three-run home run in
the first inning of the St. Louis Car
dinals’ 7-1 season-opening victory
over the Chicago Cubs. His stand
in cleanup hitter, Fernando Tatis,
had an RBI single and two steals.
McGwire felt he might have
saved himself from more serious
injury by deciding, just before
game time, not to play. He left in
the third inning for Barnes Hospi
tal, where an MRI showed no disc
problems. Doctors were able to
quiet spasms.
“The positive side of it is I’m
glad it happened when I was run
ning,” McGwire said. “If I was
swinging it could have been way
more severe because there’s so
much more torque.”
He was optimistic about his
playing chances on Wednesday,
the Cardinals’ second game of the
season. And if not then, he’s cer
tain it won’t be a long setback.
“Today, I feel so much better.
Yesterday I walked out of here
and I was completely crooked,”
McGwire said.
Missing opening day is a disap
pointment he’ll get over. He did
get to participate in the pregame
parade.
“When you look at it over the
long run, it’s one game,” McGwire
said. “The doctors did a great job
eliminating the spasms that I
feared, and I’m moving around a
lot better.”
McGwire, 36, has hit 135 home
runs during the last two years and
245 in the last four. He appeared
in 153 of 162 games.
Normally, trainer Barry Wein
berg is the final authority on
whether McGwire plays. This
time, McGwire took himself out
after feeling something pop on
his final wind sprint.
“It’s the movement I fear every
day,” McGwire said. “There was
a pop and it grabbed and I said
‘That’s it.’”
McGwire also sat out the final
two spring training games due to
back woes. He visited an
acupuncturist Saturday night.
“It hadn’t been right for over a
week, but it was playable,” McG
wire said. “There’s a playable
and a non-playable, and the
movement that happened before
the game made me non-playable.
There was no way.”
Notes: About a dozen players,
or about half the roster, partici
pated in a brief optional workout
Tuesday. Players haven’t had a
day off since March 22, the only
break in the spring schedule.
“Today is kind of an errand day,”
manager Tony La Russa said.
“But if somebody wants to come
down, we’re here for them.” ...
Pat Hentgen, who was among
those working out, opposes Kyle
Farnsworth on Wednesday. Hent
gen was 1-2 with a 7.08 ERA in
spring training. He’ll be followed
in the rotation by Garrett
Stephenson, opening-day winner
Darryl Kile on Saturday and
rookie Rick Ankiel on Sunday.
Golfers
continued from page 7
Lavoie led the team at both the
Pac-10 Championships and the
NCAA Championships.If there is
such a thing as a good pressure
golfer, Lavoie is it.
The Ducks will get to know
Tempe, Ariz., very well over the
next two weeks. The Karsten
Golf Course in Tempe is the site
of the Thunderbird Invitational
next Saturday and Sunday. It’s
also the site of the Pac-10 Cham
pionships April 18 through 20.
Oregon plays in the U.S. Inter
collegiate May 6 and 7.