Tiger's new identity on display as Masters Week begins

Tiger's new identity on display as Masters Week begins

Published Apr. 8, 2015 3:16 a.m. ET

 

After his life was torn apart by rape accusations, Kobe Bryant knew he no longer could be himself.

It had become too painful to hear what they were yelling from the stands.

And it was all starting to take its toll on his performances on the court.

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So he decided to create an alter ego.

"I had to organize things, so I created the 'Black Mamba,'" he says in the recent revealing Showtime documentary, "Kobe Bryant's Muse."

"So, Kobe has to deal with these issues, all the personal challenges. The Black Mamba steps on the court and does what he does. It was just ... f--- everyone. I'm destroying everybody that steps on the court."

Bryant once said of the Black Mamba that "there's a difference between who you are and what you are."

"When I stepped on that court, I became that killer snake, and I'm stone cold."

Tiger Woods was a killer, too. The deadliest of assassins when the tournament was on the line. And stone cold.

Woods once famously walked through the Augusta National clubhouse getting ready for a Sunday Masters run and was so enveloped in his cocoon that he ignored even the goodwill wishes of his mother and Nike chairman Phil Knight.

Fourteen times he took the lead into Sunday at a major and closed the deal.

But that Tiger has long been gone.

Maybe it was the shock of losing to Y.E. Yang in the 2009 PGA Championship — the first time he'd ever coughed up a third-round lead at a major — or more likely because of the scar tissue that came from his tabloid scandal later that same year.

Whatever the pathology, he hasn't just not played like the Tiger of old in majors since his last win seven years ago — he also hasn't acted like him, either.

Woods has spent the past six years searching for an identity. And this week, he might just have found one.

He arrived at Augusta National — where he last won a green jacket 10 years ago, when Jordan Spieth was 11 — late on Monday afternoon with earbuds resting on his shoulders.

He went to the practice range and started listening to hip-hop.

"I just wanted to rock out," Woods said during an uncharacteristically open Tuesday news conference. "It was just nice. That's what I practice in at home. Practicing for hours on end, it's nice to have a little bit of tunes."

Last time Tiger rocked out to tunes at a major?

Yes, that's right ...

Then came the back slapping and joking around with a number of different players who came to wish him well in his return from a self-imposed two-month exile.

Remember when he gave beatdowns to the pretenders to his throne? Now he's giving them bro hugs.

And on Wednesday, Woods will play the Par 3 contest for the first time since 2004. Like any proud dad, he'll have his kids, Sam and Charlie, act as his caddies.

"It's special," he said. "This tournament means so much to me in so many different ways. We all know what happened in '97 with my dad's health, and he was pronounced — well, he was dead at one point earlier that year; came back, and then came here and I won the Masters.

"To now have come full circle and to have a chance to have my kids out there and be able to share that with them, it's special. It just means the world to me."

Emotional, nostalgic, softer and kinder; safe to say, this is a different — and probably psychologically healthier — Tiger.

But can he still win?

Typically, he insists that nothing has changed.

"I'm still trying to beat everybody out there," he said.

But surely only everything has changed.

There's no longer a sense of dread or intimidation among his peers when Tiger steps to the tee.

Instead, there's something that resembles curiosity.

As Rory McIlroy said, he'll be watching.

"And just like everyone else, I'll be looking for his score and seeing what he's doing," McIlroy said.

When Kobe became the Black Mamba he won two NBA championships — was the MVP in both series — and won another MVP title.

Maybe Tiger will kill them with kindness?

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