Woods seeks more major titles

 

when you win a major championship, and it feels incredible,” Woods said as he reflected on his year.
“It lasts with you, and that’s something that I would like to have happen again.”

Woods hasn’t won one of golf’s four major championships since his 2008 US Open triumph at Torrey Pines.

His pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’s record of 18 majors remains stalled at 14, but Woods believes he has emerged from a tunnel of distractions — his disastrous marital crisis, serious injury and the re-engineering of his swing — and is ready to tackle golf’s biggest challenges in 2013.
So, however, is current world number one Rory McIlroy.

“I still feel I have some of my best golf to play, and in order to do that, I had to be healthy, and this year is headed in the right direction,” Woods said. “I’m very excited about next year.

“Rory is ranked number one. He deserves it. He’s won tournaments all around the world. He’s had high finishes on top of that, and that’s how you do it . . . He should be very proud of the season he’s had, and I’m sure he’s excited about what next year holds for him, as well.”

Expectations for Woods’s 2012 season were raised when he capped 2011 with a victory in the World Challenge, the 18-man unofficial event he hosts for the benefit of his charitable foundation.

But things looked dark in March, when he abruptly departed the World Golf Championships event at Doral during the final round as inflammation in his achilles tendon flared up.

He quickly quelled speculation that chronic injury might blight the rest of his career, winning his next start at Bay Hill for his first US PGA Tour title in more than two years.

Then came another dry spell — a tie for 40th at the Masters, a missed cut at Quail Hollow and a tie for 40th at The Players championship.

The magic was back at The Memorial, where he chipped in for birdie from dense rough at the 16th hole on Sunday for another tension-packed victory that ratcheted up expectations for the US Open.

It was another major bust — a share of the halfway lead yielding nothing more than a tie for 21st at the Olympic club in San Francisco.

The pattern was repeated at the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island in August — a share of the halfway lead but not even a top-10 finish. — AFP.

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