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Golf
News: -
Posted 2nd June 1998
Back problem
forces Woods to withdraw from Kemper Open
Associated
Press
With the U.S.
Open just two weeks away, Tiger Woods withdrew yesterday from the
Kemper Open with a sore back and flew to Las Vegas for treatment.
"His physical
therapist advised him that with the U.S. Open coming up he could
aggravate the condition by playing this week and suggested he come
to Las Vegas for treatment,'' said Bev Norwood, a spokesman for
Woods with International Management Group.
Las Vegas is
also where Woods's coach, Butch Harmon, is based.
Woods played
last week at the Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, finishing
51st. He flew home to Orlando, Fla., Sunday night.
"This
is a precautionary measure to ensure that he is ready and able to
play in the U.S. Open,'' Norwood said.
Ben Bundred,
Kemper Open tournament chairman, said Woods felt his back stiffen
on the flight from Ohio to Orlando. He said the pain worsened when
Woods hit balls in Orlando this morning.
"He thought
nothing of it, went to bed, and this morning when he went to work
out, it hurt worse,'' Bundred said.
Bundred added
that Woods recently had an MRI on his back and that his therapist,
Keith Kleven, suggested Woods fly to Las Vegas for treatment of
what could be a "potential chronic problem.''
Woods has played
in 39 PGA Tour events since turning pro in 1996, and this was the
first time he withdrew because of injury. He pulled out of the 1995
U.S. Open as a amateur after one round because of a sore wrist.
He also withdrew
from the Buick Challenge in 1996 because of exhaustion.
"Tiger
has had back pains on and off but his parents have always assumed
they were growing pains,'' Norwood said. "But the therapist
he has been working with for six months said there was some irregularities
in his lower back.''
Woods, 22,
has already won seven tournaments, including the 1997 Masters, and
nearly $4 million in less that two years on the PGA Tour. Tall and
lanky, his enormously hard swing clearly puts strain on his back.
The treatment
will consist of stretching, back stabilization, heat and ice, his
spokesman said. He said it was not immediately clear how the injury
would affect Woods's practice routine for the U.S. Open.
The U.S. Open
will be played June 18-21 at the Olympic Club in San Francisco,
a course Woods knows well from his college career at Stanford University.
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