Date: Fri 22-Aug-1997
Date: Fri 22-Aug-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Quick Words:
PGA-Tournament-Column
Full Text:
Kim Harmon/On Sports - Trip To PGA Tournament
B Y K IM J. H ARMON
MAMARONECK, NY - A glimpse . . . that's all. Everyone just had to have a
glimpse. They pushed a little. They jostled a little more. They insinuated
themselves between two people and tried to get up close, to the rope.
Just a glimpse . . . that's all.
And there he strode, fresh from the putting green, through a gauntlet bordered
by ropes and patrolled by uniformed police officers. His face was silent,
implacable, intentionally oblivious to the raucous cheers and applause that
drenched him like a summer rain.
Time stood still.
He passed through.
And was gone.
Then just like that, real time started up again. The gauntlet was gone. The
traffic flow across the tarmac began to stream to points elsewhere. The crowd
dispersed.
Most members of that crowd were pleased - some perhaps so much so they could
be called rapturous.
They got their glimpse.
Their glimpse of Tiger Woods.
Like moths to a porch light - heck, like the religious to a sighting of the
Virgin Mary - they make their pilgrimages to the golf tournaments . . . last
weekend being the PGA Championship at Mamaroneck, New York. All to get a look
at a 21-year-old phenomenon who has a swing crafted in heaven and all the
money (about $100 million) to go with it.
I understood it was happening, but I had to see it for myself. Down to the PGA
Championship we went, with my intent being to write a piece on the Tiger Woods
cult of personality, the rabid fascination the people have with this young
superstar.
Problem was, I didn't realize I was member of that cult. Once I climbed aboard
the shuttle, heading up the hill to Winged Foot, I realized I wanted to catch
a glimpse of Tiger Woods just as much as everyone else. I had to see this kid.
I had to feel whatever aura that radiated from him.
It took an hour or so. As soon as we stepped off the shuttle, I heard someone
proclaim, "Tiger tees off at 1:07." Aah, a pilgrim. A member of the cult. We
headed for the first tee, stopped off to see Freddie Couples and Newtown caddy
Joe LaCava, and then set up a stance at the tent behind the grandstand at the
first tee box.
There he came.
Focussed. Intense. Closing himself off to the cheers and the applause.
Affording himself, though, a few seconds to smile and shake hands with the
champ, Evander Holyfield, who stood off to the side near the grandstand
waiting to see the kid.
I began to examine why I - like millions of others - were so enraptured with
Tiger Woods that I would stand for over an hour (later standing and then
sitting for about 90 minutes) just to catch a look at this young man. I
suppose it has a lot to do with envy - he is young, loaded with talent, and
affluent to the point of absurdity. For most people, I think it ends right
there; envy is a strong emotion.
For me, though, it is also because of the persona. Tiger Woods has become an
icon - already - and is stitching himself a little spot on the fabric of
Americana. He is a character. A legend. Someone that people will be telling
stories about years and years from now.
Like Ben Hogan.
Jack Nicklaus.
John Daly.
It's a cult of personality . . . and we are all willing members. No need to be
stolen away from the PGA tournaments and deprogrammed back into normal
society.
It's all rather funny, too, or sad. Depends on how you look at it.
After Tiger blasted his tee shot down the heart of the first fairway last
Friday, hundreds of people lined the ropes in order to see this young man (who
looked really small from one side of the fairway) hit his approach to the
green.
Yep, hundreds of people watched that.
Behind us about thirty yards, on the ninth hole, Ignacio Garrido of Spain was
contemplating a terrible lie in the rough. On the other side of the fairway,
Doug Martin of Edgewood, Texas, was also looking at a shot from the rough.
Their gallery numbered exactly two. Four when Tom Wyatt and I walked over.
Garrido punched out of the rough and got a brief moment of applause and a
claim of, "Nice shot," from the gallery that had grown to 15 . . . all because
Tiger Woods had yet to hit his approach.
When Garrido handed his club to his caddy, the gallery flocked back to the
first fairway.
It is not the golf we go to see. Garrido hit a terrific shot out of the rough,
but it was forgotten because Garrido is, well, a nobody. He isn't Tiger Woods
or John Daly or Jack Nicklaus or Greg Norman. He isn't even Freddie Couples of
Phil Mickelson or Ernie Els.
Garrido went off to his third shot and no one followed him.
It is not the golf we go to see. It is the stars . . . the legends. As if, at
some future point in our lives, we can look back and tell our kids or
grandkids that we saw Tiger Woods.
And I know now that if Tiger keeps his legend alive, improves it to the
stature that Jack Nicklaus now nurtures his, then that is exactly what I will
be doing.
