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Woods selected as AP Male
Athlete of 2006 in close vote over LT
By DOUG FERGUSON, AP Golf Writer
December 26, 2006
Tiger Woods had an answer for everything.
When he missed the cut at the U.S. Open for the first time in a major
-- his first tournament after his father died of cancer -- some
questioned whether he could rekindle his desire to dominate. He never
finished worse than second in stroke play the rest of the season.
Phil Mickelson emerged anew as a serious threat to Woods' domain by
winning his second straight major at the Masters and nearly making it
three in a row at the U.S. Open. Woods responded by winning the next
two majors without breaking a sweat.
And there remained skepticism about his latest swing change, put to
rest by a year that ranked among Woods' best ever on the PGA Tour. He
won eight times in 15 starts, six in a row to close out his season,
two more majors to reach 12 for his career.
About the only thing he couldn't answer was how he was voted AP Male
Athlete of the Year.
Woods won the award over San Diego Chargers running back LaDainian
Tomlinson, with tennis great Roger Federer a distant third. The
31-year-old Woods won for the fourth time in his career, tying the
record set by Lance Armstrong, who won the last four years.
While pleased to hear he had won the award, Woods was perplexed it did
not go to his good friend Federer, who continues to dominate tennis.
Woods was in Federer's box at Flushing Meadows when the Swiss star
captured the U.S. Open.
"What he's done in tennis, I think, is far greater than what I've done
in golf," Woods said. "He's lost what ... five matches in three years?
That's pretty good."
Federer actually has lost a few more than that, but not many. His
record in 2006 was an amazing 92-5, including 12 singles titles.
Woods received 260 points from sports editors around the country.
Tomlinson, who already has set an NFL record of 31 touchdowns with one
regular-season game left, was second with 230 points. Federer, who won
three Grand Slam titles and lost in the final at the French Open, had
110 points.
Rounding out the top of the list were Miami Heat guard Dwyane Wade (40
points) and St. Louis Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols and NL home run
champion Ryan Howard of the Philadelphia Phillies (20 points each).
Fred Couples, the former Masters champion and all-around sports nut
who attended Wimbledon this year, ran through the achievements of the
top three and figured it would be a tough vote to cast.
"Roger Federer is pretty sporty," Couples said. "Tomlinson is going to
pound the record by I don't know how many TDs. It's all great. You
would think if you're Roger Federer and you didn't win it this year,
you don't know what else you could possibly do. But Tiger ... it's not
like he's not deserving. He's winning 55 percent of the tournaments he
plays. He's probably ahead of Shaq's free throw percentage."
Woods again made it look routine, winning at least eight PGA Tour
events for the third time in his career and becoming the first player
in history to capture multiple majors in consecutive seasons.
"Any time you're over 50 percent winning in our sports, it's probably
a good year," Woods said. "I know how hard it is. I know what it takes
to get to that point. I hate to say it, but people in the media and
fans don't understand how hard it is. Players do. The things players
have said to me over the years, that means a lot."
What made this year different from others was the magnitude of his
loss.
After winning his first two tournaments of the year, the Buick
Invitational and the Dubai Desert Classic on the European Tour, Woods'
progress slowed as his father's health deteriorated. Earl Woods, the
father, architect and driving force behind his son as a person and a
player, died May 3.
During a celebration of his father's life in the lobby of the Tiger
Woods Learning Center, Woods refused to sit as he listened to stories
about his father, his solemn face yielding to an occasional grin
whenever someone told a humorous anecdote. He said later he tends to
bottle up his emotions, and they burst forth at the British Open.
Using driver only once on the crispy links of Royal Liverpool, Woods
won by two shots to become the first player in 23 years with
back-to-back wins at the British Open, and the lasting image of his
season was Woods sobbing on the shoulder of his caddie, then his wife,
realizing it was the first golf victory he couldn't share with his
father.
"At that moment, it just came pouring out," he said that day. "And of
all the things that my father has meant to me and the game of golf, I
just wish he would have seen it one more time."
To this day, Woods said he quickly turns off the tape of British Open
highlights when he taps in his final putt.
The rest of the year was a blur of trophies. He overpowered the field
at the Buick Open, putted his best at the PGA Championship, outlasted
Stewart Cink in a playoff at the Bridgestone Invitational, made two
eagles in the first seven holes on his way to a 63 to overcome a
three-shot deficit against Vijay Singh at the Deutsche Bank
Championship, then won by eight shots at the American Express
Championship.
On paper, the results looked familiar. In his heart, Woods said it was
his toughest year, which he ultimately described as a loss because of
his father's death.
For his peers, it left them at a loss for words.
"We're used to it," Davis Love III said. "People were trying to
compare this year to 2000, but 2000 was surprising. Now it's like
saying, 'Hey, there's a Ferrari. Oh, there's another Ferrari. There's
another Ferrari.' It's an outstanding year, but it's not his only one.
If I had a year like his, they would say, 'What an incredible year.'
For him, it's just another brilliant year.
"It's hard for him when he wins four tournaments and no majors because
people say, 'What in the world happened? That's when you realize how
good he is."