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	<title>Golf Clubs Warehouse Blog &#187; golf news</title>
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		<title>Did Mark Calcavecchia know about Tiger`s &#8220;dependance&#8221;?</title>
		<link>http://www.golfclubswarehouse.com/blog/golf-news/mark-calcavecchia-knew-about-tiger</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Mar 2010 19:18:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>gcw</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[golf news]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[calcavecchia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tiger woods]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Mark Calcavecchia knew about Tiger


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>as seen on golf.com</p>
<p>http://blogs.golf.com/presstent/2010/03/mark-calcavecchia-says-tiger-woods-changed-his-cell-number-five-times-last-year.html</p>
<h1>Mark Calcavecchia says Tiger Woods changed his  cell</h1>
<h1>number five times last year</h1>
<p>As it turns out, Tiger Woods wasn&#8217;t asking his alleged mistress  Jaimee Grubbs to do anything he wouldn&#8217;t do when he asked her to tweak  her cell phone.</p>
<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t really think about it, but in the course of last year he  changed his number five times,&#8221; says Tiger&#8217;s one-time texting buddy Mark  Calcavecchia. &#8220;The last time he did, I said, &#8216;Man, you change phone  numbers more than I change underwear.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Like many others, Calc is a huge Tiger fan. The two have played practice  rounds together before majors and other tournaments, and the  49-year-old veteran took special care to zing Tiger when he had, say,  sweated through his shirt but neglected to change it before a TV  interview.</p>
<p>&#8220;It was always something silly,&#8221; Calcavecchia says. &#8220;But I sent him a  couple of texts right after all this stuff started and obviously he  didn&#8217;t get back to me. I&#8217;m sure one of these days out of nowhere he&#8217;ll  text me and say, &#8216;This is my new number.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Almost to a man, players, caddies and agents profess to have been  totally unaware of Tiger&#8217;s double life, but in retrospect Woods&#8217;s  multiple changes of cell number wasn&#8217;t Calc&#8217;s only tip-off that  something was up.</p>
<p>&#8220;I did know of a girl he was seeing in Phoenix,&#8221; he says. &#8220;But I didn&#8217;t  know the time frame. I didn&#8217;t know if it was before or after he was  married that he was with her. I knew it was close. It was 2004 sometime.  I didn&#8217;t think much of it then&#8230;&#8221;</p>
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		<title>Tiger&#8217;s comeback tougher than Ali&#8217;s?</title>
		<link>http://www.golfclubswarehouse.com/blog/golf-news/tigers-comeback</link>
		<comments>http://www.golfclubswarehouse.com/blog/golf-news/tigers-comeback#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Mar 2010 13:13:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>gcw</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Tiger's comeback tougher than Ali's...


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/100303"><img src="http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2010/0303/espn_g_tiger-ali_bipanel_576.jpg" border="0" alt="Tiger Woods, Muhammad Ali" width="576" height="324" /></a><cite>Getty  Images</cite></div>
<p><!-- end wide photo --></p>
<p>As seen on ESPN Sports at http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/100303</p>
<p>Ever see those crazy guys  in the park playing speed chess? They&#8217;re flying along at warp speed,  trusting their instincts and trying to avoid one mistake that might get  them checkmated. That&#8217;s what doing an online chat is like. Writing a  column is like chess; you have time to mull strategies and move pieces  into the right places. But an online chat? Speed chess.</p>
<p>My <a href="http://espn.go.com/sportsnation/chat/_/id/31052/page-2-bill-simmons" target="new">Friday chat</a> on ESPN.com drew 42,000 questions. The  total transcript was 9,600 words, and because I probably typed  two-thirds of them, that means I banged out about 6,400 words in three  hours. When I wasn&#8217;t typing, I was sifting through questions looking for  a good one to post. Didn&#8217;t pee. Didn&#8217;t get a drink. Didn&#8217;t even stand  up. Just emptied my brain on a keyboard.</p>
<p>Now here&#8217;s why I rarely  do chats anymore: Under speed chess conditions, it becomes exceedingly  possible that either (A) I might say something inappropriate, (B) I  might infuriate my bosses in some way or (C) I might argue a point  incorrectly without realizing it until later. On Friday, I made a  mistake comparing the 2010 Tiger Woods to the 1970 Muhammad Ali, saying  Tiger&#8217;s comeback would be much tougher because &#8220;everyone under 35 was  rooting for Ali.&#8221; Total hyperbole that never would have happened had I  spent more time thinking about it. More importantly, I botched a quality  point that could have made for an interesting column.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s  return to my admittedly rushed thesis …</p>
<p><em>When Tiger Woods  returns to golf, he will face a level of pressure that well surpasses  anything any other transcendent athlete has faced in my lifetime.</em></p>
<p>Yeah.  Absolutely. Let&#8217;s hop on the course and play nine holes (in the form of  points) to bang home the point that, yes, Tiger&#8217;s presumed return to  golf in 2010 will be significantly more difficult than Ali&#8217;s return to  boxing in 1970.</p>
<p><strong>Hole No. 1 (par 4)</strong><br />
Tiger hasn&#8217;t played golf competitively in four months. As far as we  know, until this week he  hasn&#8217;t played a single hole since  mid-November. Just Tuesday, there was <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/golf/news/story?id=4958994" target="new">a  news article</a> saying Tiger has returned home and is &#8220;trying to get  back into a routine that includes golf and fitness.&#8221; <em>Trying to get  back into a routine?</em> That sounds ominous.</p>
<p><strong>Hole No. 2  (par 4)</strong><br />
The man is coming off two significant derailments: Reconstructive knee  surgery (summer 2008) and a self-imposed exile (winter of 2009-10). In a  41-month stretch from 2005 through the 2008 U.S. Open, Tiger reeled off  25 PGA Tour titles (six of them majors). Is that guy gone? How many  times have we seen an imposing golfer lose his way and never regain his  mojo? Remember when Tom Watson stopped making big putts? Remember when  Greg Norman lost his confidence after too many collapses? Golf is a  mental sport. You need a ton of self-confidence, you need an unwavering  belief in your own talents and you need to be able to tune out any and  all distractions. Hell, Tiger could barely handle someone&#8217;s camera  clicking during his backswing. He&#8217;s going to be able to handle … this?</p>
<div>
<div style="margin-left: 10px; width: 300px;"><a onclick="window.open('http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/gallery/enlargePhoto?id=4962568&amp;story=4961837','Popup','width=640,height=750,scrollbars=no,noresize');  return false;" href="http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/100303#">[+] Enlarge<img src="http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2010/0303/pg2_a_tiger-elin01_300.jpg" border="0" alt="Tiger and Elin Woods" width="300" height="300" /></a></p>
<div style="width: 300px;"><cite>AP Photo/Rob Carr</cite>Tiger would  undoubtedly love to turn the clock back to 2006, when he won the PGA  Championship.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>(Note: When Ali returned from his  exile with rusty skills, he stopped dancing as much, absorbed more  punishment and learned to pick his spots. As his skills slipped even  further later in his career, he absorbed insane amounts of punishment  and banked on his innate will to prevail in the end. That&#8217;s the main  reason he can barely say a sentence right now. If Tiger comes back with  similar rust, I can&#8217;t imagine him being able to change his style on the  fly as Ali did. Either it comes back or it doesn&#8217;t.)</p>
<p><strong>Hole No. 3  (par 3)</strong><br />
Don&#8217;t discount Tiger&#8217;s advancing age (34) at this point. Watson never  won another major after he turned 34; neither did Arnold Palmer, Fred  Couples, Seve Ballesteros or Curtis Strange. Nick Faldo won only one  major after 34 &#8212; the 1996 Masters that Norman choked away. Only Jack  Nicklaus thrived from 34 to 40 (16 PGA Tour titles, three majors),  although Norman (eight Tour titles, one major) and Lee Trevino (six  titles, one major) also fared pretty well. Tom Kite peaked <em>after</em> he turned 34. Nick Price won two majors at 37; Mark O&#8217;Meara won his only  two at 41. And sure, Tiger was better than all of those guys. But none  of those guys had to keep winning while rebuilding his life after a  DEFCON 1 public humiliation.</p>
<p><strong>Hole No. 4 (par 4)</strong><br />
Winning his wife back will require significant effort &#8212; certainly more  than Tiger spent on his family pre-Thanksgiving. Ali, Jordan, Tiger  pre-2010 … part of what made them great was that they <em>weren&#8217;t</em> family men. Families were just another thing they owned, no different  from cars, houses or whatever. Everything was compartmentalized, and  nothing was allowed to affect the overall brand. The brand came first.  Always. Because Tiger appears to be serious about keeping his family  intact, how could that not affect his golf routine to some degree? And  what about dealing with the day-to-day stuff any philandering husband  faces while trying to win back a wife battling trust issues?</p>
<p><em>Why  didn&#8217;t you answer when I called? Why does your BlackBerry have a  password again? Who&#8217;s going on this trip with you?</em></p>
<p>When Ali&#8217;s  second marriage finally fell apart while he was training for the George  Foreman fight in Zaire, he simply fell for someone else (the beautiful  Veronica Porsche, who later dumped him right around when the Parkinson&#8217;s  started kicking in) and dumped his dutiful wife, Belinda. (Brutally,  actually. She heard about him squiring around with someone else, then  flew across the world to confront him. Didn&#8217;t work.) Ali ended up  winning the two biggest fights of his career in succession: Foreman and  the third Joe Frazier fight. He didn&#8217;t care about hurting his brand; if  anything, the media in Zaire covered up the love triangle. Had he been  more worried about his brand, losing everything he had, keeping his  family together and rehabbing his public image, wouldn&#8217;t that have  affected his performances in the Foreman and Frazier fights at least a  little?</p>
<p><strong>Hole No. 5 (par 4)</strong><br />
Once upon a time, everyone left Tiger alone, partly because the media  didn&#8217;t want to piss him off, partly because he crafted such a good  buffer between himself and the outside world, and partly because there  wasn&#8217;t anything sexy or interesting about him. That&#8217;s how he lived from  1997 to 2009. Even named his boat &#8220;Privacy.&#8221; And really, he had it.</p>
<p>Not  anymore. Tiger will spend the rest of his playing days as Jordan did in  the latter half of his Chicago career &#8212; trapped in hotel suites and  charter planes, occasionally emerging to play sports, and if he needs to  blow off steam, his options are &#8220;the nearest high-stakes gambling  area,&#8221; and that&#8217;s about it. I&#8217;m not saying Tiger&#8217;s life was normal  before Thanksgiving, but he didn&#8217;t have paparazzi stalking him, tabloids  making up things about him, bloggers chronicling his every move and  people taping him with camera phones everywhere he goes. Fish, meet  bowl. And he&#8217;s a big-ass fish. How will he handle it? We don&#8217;t know.</p>
<div>
<div style="margin-left: 10px; width: 300px;"><a onclick="window.open('http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/gallery/enlargePhoto?id=4962549&amp;story=4961837','Popup','width=640,height=550,scrollbars=no,noresize');  return false;" href="http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/100303#">[+] Enlarge<img src="http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2010/0303/pg2_a_alicourt_300.jpg" border="0" alt="Ali" width="300" height="200" /></a></p>
<div style="width: 300px;"><cite>AP Photo/Ed Kolenovsky</cite>Ali&#8217;s court case received  plenty of media attention, but it was nothing like today&#8217;s 24/7 news  cycle.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p><strong>Hole No. 6 (par 5)</strong><br />
Forget about Ali; not even Jordan faced anything like the current  sports/celebrity climate. It can&#8217;t even be called a 24/7 news cycle  anymore. It&#8217;s like 72/7. TMZ, Us Weekly, People, Star, gossip blogs,  sports blogs, 24-hour sports radio, ESPN talking heads, six mainstream  sports Web sites, camera phones, message boards, YouTube, flip cameras,  Twitter … are you kidding me? Would you want to be a famously shamed  athlete striving to regain past success in 2010?</p>
<p>Plus, Jordan had  the buffer of a basketball court. Ali had the buffer of a boxing ring  and just a few fights per year. Golf? Doesn&#8217;t work that way. You&#8217;re  walking among fans for hole after hole. They&#8217;re right there. Always.  Studying every move you make from as close as five feet away. And you  can&#8217;t come and go; you need to be out there swinging your sticks week  after week after week in city after city after city. Which means this  will be a traveling sideshow, at least for the first few months.</p>
<p><strong>Hole  No. 7 (par 4)</strong><br />
How will the fans react? Do we know? Do we have any inkling? I could see  the turmoil eventually turning him into a sentimental underdog; after  all, we watched him go through the Celebrity F&#8212; up Car Wash, dissected  it, made our jokes, broke it down at cocktail parties, and now,  selfishly, we&#8217;re ready to see him reclaim &#8220;best golfer ever&#8221; status.  That&#8217;s the most idealistic view of how it plays out. But we don&#8217;t know.  And I guarantee you, neither does Tiger Woods.</p>
<p>Remember, everybody  has been rooting for him since he was <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_wHkA_983_s" target="new">wowing  Mike Douglas</a> as a 2-year-old. Although we&#8217;ve seen tournaments when  another golfer swayed the gallery from him, Tiger always knew where he  stood with fans. But what about now? (On Wednesday, an <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/golf/news/story?id=4960760">ABC  News/ESPN poll revealed</a> that only 39 percent of the 1,000  respondents surveyed had a favorable impression of Tiger, compared with  85 percent in 2005.) Golf and tennis are the two worst possible sports  for any elephant-in-the-room situation, thanks to dead silence nearly  all the time. Every heckle will feel like an uber-heckle. Every cheer  for a competing golfer will feel even more biting than usual. Again,  think of how he reacted on the golf course pre-Thanksgiving. How will he  handle it?</p>
<p>(Note: The 2008 U.S. Open catapulted Tiger to a  different level. Winning it on one leg did for him what the Foreman  fight did for Ali and the 72-win season did for MJ: It made everyone  say, &#8220;We&#8217;re now at the point that I&#8217;m going to be telling my  great-grandkids that I watched this guy. So let the winning continue!&#8221;  As long as we don&#8217;t have a hometown favorite involved, we&#8217;re always  going to root for greatness over anything else. That&#8217;s the best place to  be as an athlete &#8212; people pulling for you, always, week after week,  with the athlete feeding off their strength. Can he win that back?)</p>
<p><strong>Hole  No. 8 (par 3)</strong><br />
When Ali returned from his Vietnam-related exile, he had two massive  groups of people pulling for him: Black America and the anti-war  movement. He was part of something bigger than he was; that gave him  additional motivation to persevere, and if anything, he fed off those  two worlds. Tiger isn&#8217;t part of anything. Where will he draw that extra  strength from if the fans don&#8217;t come through for him?</p>
<p>(Note: I  thought about delving into the whole &#8220;women hate Tiger&#8221; angle here, but  I&#8217;m not sure it has anything to do with anything. Just know that if he  plays the 2010 Masters, my wife will be rooting for him to accidentally  club himself in the head on every swing. And I don&#8217;t think she&#8217;s alone.)</p>
<p><strong>Hole  No. 9 (par 5)</strong><br />
The biggest wrinkle nobody is mentioning: What if this starts out badly?  What if Tiger plays a couple of tournaments and just stinks? What if he  can&#8217;t get anything going? What if <em>the</em> dominant story becomes,  &#8220;Will Tiger Woods ever get it back?&#8221; What if he&#8217;s dealing with that  question constantly, day after day, week after week, city after city,  over and over and over again, and that doubt seeps into his head? Ali  fought only every few months and had the luxury of picking cream-puff  opponents if need be. Tiger will be competing against himself week after  week &#8212; not just his potential, but the ghost of what he could once do.  There&#8217;s no greater pressure in sports.</p>
<p>Now, there&#8217;s a chance golf  will become something of a sanctuary for Tiger Woods &#8212; a little like  what basketball meant to Jordan in those final Chicago seasons.  Including playoffs, Jordan played 310 of a possible 310 games in three  seasons from 1996 through 1998. Why? Because he was a hypercompetitive  maniac, but also because a basketball court was one of the few places  that made him happy. I could see this happening with Tiger. Potentially.  There&#8217;s also a chance Tiger could come roaring out of the gate in Eff  You Mode and give us an exhilarating stretch of golf like we&#8217;ve never  seen in our lives. Everything&#8217;s in play.</p>
<p>At gunpoint, if I could  wager on any conceivable scenario, I would wager on Tiger coming back in  severe Eff You Mode, like a seething MJ in Game 1 of the 1992 Finals.  The greatest ones have a way of channeling negativity and fueling it  toward whatever makes them great. Jordan made a habit of it. So did Ali.  But they were also larger-than-life personalities, whereas Tiger was  always just someone who was freakishly good at golf and that&#8217;s it.</p>
<p>So  it remains to be seen whether Tiger has Severe Eff You DNA. But if you  were him, would you have rather had this saga happen in 1970 or 2010?  It&#8217;s no contest. He&#8217;s being picked apart like a biology frog right now,  and we won&#8217;t know whether three months (and counting) of ridicule and  shame permanently derailed his confidence in any way. Only when he  emerges from hiding and starts playing again will we have our answer.</p>
<div>
<div style="margin-left: 10px; width: 300px;"><a onclick="window.open('http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/gallery/enlargePhoto?id=4962529&amp;story=4961837','Popup','width=640,height=550,scrollbars=no,noresize');  return false;" href="http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=simmons/100303#">[+] Enlarge<img src="http://a.espncdn.com/photo/2010/0303/pg2_a_alim_300.jpg" border="0" alt="Muhammad Ali" width="300" height="200" /></a></p>
<div style="width: 300px;"><cite>AP Photo/Joe Holloway Jr.</cite>By the time  Ali returned to fight Jerry Quarry in 1970, he had legions of  supporters.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>That brings us to Ali. His exile lasted  almost 43 months, with the former champ finally returning for an  exhibition in Atlanta (September 1970), then his first official fight  against Jerry Quarry a few weeks later. Unlike Tiger, Ali loved the  limelight and remains the greatest natural resource the sports media  ever encountered. He traveled to dozens of college campuses and spoke  out about racial injustice and his stance against the war. He had two  enormous allies in Howard Cosell (the most powerful sports broadcaster  at the time) and Sports Illustrated (the most powerful sports magazine),  as well as a phalanx of big-name writers (George Plimpton, Dick Schaap,  etc.) who attached themselves to him and sang his praises. He never had  to deal with a 24/7 news cycle; if anything, it was a once-a-week  cycle. Either way, it wouldn&#8217;t have mattered. Ali always loved being the  center of attention.</p>
<p>You can&#8217;t overstate how much Ali&#8217;s life  changed from 1967 (when he was considered a draft-dodging, uppity,  outspoken negro who had the gall to adopt a Muslim name, and if that&#8217;s  not enough, it seemed as though he was headed for jail) to the fall of  1970 (when he had been reinvented as something of a visionary in a  country now obsessed with the Vietnam quagmire and equal rights).  Heading into the Quarry fight, he still had Old-School White America  against him (then again, so did Jim Brown, Bill Russell and Lew  Alcindor), as well as pro-war zealots (then again, so did countless  celebrities and musicians who also spoke out against the war) and even  some prominent writers (most notably Red Smith and Jim Murray) still  excoriating him. His biggest issue was a suspension by Nation of Islam  leader Elijah Muhammad &#8212; a rift that healed only because Ali became a  cash cow postexile, so of course the Nation of Islam quickly made amends  &#8212; that briefly worried his camp about his safety.</p>
<p>But the  pressures of Ali&#8217;s exile (especially in the first two years) shouldn&#8217;t  be confused with the pressure of his actual comeback (which wasn&#8217;t  nearly as daunting as you would think). By the fall of 1970, Ali wasn&#8217;t  getting hounded by paparazzi or picked apart by an obsessive media. If  anything, he lost a little fame as the exile dragged along, and he fell  out of public consciousness to some degree. Sports Illustrated put him <a href="http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/cover/featured/8125/index.htm">on  its cover</a> in May 1969, then deemed him unworthy of another until  the month of the first Frazier fight <a href="http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/cover/featured/8218/index.htm">nearly  two years later</a>. In the weeks leading up to the Quarry fight, most  of the anti-Ali stuff had died down or disappeared entirely. He had  evolved into a &#8220;political and social force,&#8221; as biographer Thomas Hauser  described him. In Hauser&#8217;s book, longtime boxing promoter Jim Jacobs  described in detail how things had changed for Ali after getting  stripped of his title:</p>
<p>&#8220;A substantial portion of the American  public disliked him, and worse, they were getting tired of hearing what  he was about. But the exile turned that around. It showed people that  Ali was sincere. It made him an underdog. … And traveling around the  country, speaking on college campuses, Ali was able to bring his message  to tens of thousands of young men and women. In a way, it was like a  Presidential candidate sowing the seeds for future caucuses and  primaries. And of course, people began to feel that whether or not they  liked Ali, he shouldn&#8217;t have been forced out for his beliefs … (when he  came back against Quarry), Ali was paid more money for that fight than  he&#8217;d ever been paid before.&#8221;</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s how Sports Illustrated&#8217;s <a href="http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1084028/index.htm" target="new">Martin Kane described Ali&#8217;s first exhibition</a> fight in  Atlanta:</p>
<p>&#8220;The roof did not fall in. No one threw a bomb. Fire and  brimstone did not rain down from heaven and no one was turned into a  pillar of salt. There wasn&#8217;t even a picket outside the Morehouse College  gym in Atlanta &#8212; just a pretty girl distributing election campaign  pamphlets. Not a peep of protest had been uttered &#8212; in Atlanta or  elsewhere &#8212; during the few days of promotion that preceded the event.&#8221;   By that time, Ali had softened much of his pro-Islam rhetoric, picked  his words more thoughtfully and started caring about the potentially  unflattering actions of the people around him. Sports Illustrated&#8217;s Mark  Kram <a href="http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1084207/index.htm" target="new">visited him before the Quarry fight</a> and described him  like so:</p>
<p>&#8220;The suspension by Elijah seems to have jolted him into  extreme caution; a need and desire for money so that he can ensure the  future of his family seems to have made him conscious of the practical  aspects of the world. Where he was once one of the indefatigable  consumers anywhere, a one-man war against recession, he now behaves like  a careful prince of commerce. Even his camp, once so virulent with  contempt for others, is of a different character. Cap&#8217;n Sam, Ali&#8217;s  bodyguard and inspired white hater, is gone, and Ali&#8217;s craftily obedient  brother is obviously absent. Only Bundini, his phrasemaker and &#8216;witch  doctor,&#8217; remains. &#8216;All I think about now,&#8217; says Ali, &#8216;is providing for  my family so they won&#8217;t have it as difficult as I did. So my three  little darling girls can get a good education and learn from the  beginning how to read and spell. Not like me.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>When Ali finally returned to the ring for real, a considerable number of  Americans were rooting for him &#8212; not &#8220;everyone,&#8221; as I stupidly  overstated in the chat, but a sizable chunk &#8212; and the event itself  captured the revolutionary spirit of that era. Activist Julian Bond  described the Quarry fight &#8220;like nothing I&#8217;ve ever seen, the black elite  of America was there&#8221; and decided it was &#8220;more than a fight … because  that night, Atlanta came into its own as the black political capital of  America.&#8221; Ali&#8217;s comeback tapped into something larger than just boxing.  And he knew it.</p>
<p>Within three years, Muhammad Ali would become  America&#8217;s most popular athlete since Babe Ruth. He changed some; the  world around him changed even more. But I skimmed through my collection  of Ali books, read the old Sports Illustrateds and even sifted through  the New York Times articles from that year, and at no point in the fall  of 1970 did anyone wonder whether Ali might fold from the pressure of  that comeback. He had come to peace with everything that had happened to  him. He just wanted to reclaim his career. Sure, there were concerns  for his safety in such a violent era &#8212; in fact, policemen and security  guards blanketed Atlanta for the exhibition and for the real fight &#8212;  but those concerns proved to be unfounded. Nothing happened.</p>
<p>Forty  years later, many people (including me) wonder whether Tiger Woods  might fold under the pressure of <em>his</em> comeback. It&#8217;s a fair  concern. The pressures aren&#8217;t nearly as meaningful as the ones  surrounding Ali &#8212; one of the most important, courageous and influential  athletes ever &#8212; but they remain pressures nonetheless. Add them  together, and it&#8217;s no contest. When Ali actually returned in September  1970, it was a cakewalk compared with what Tiger will face this month or  next month or whenever he actually returns.</p>
<p>Regardless, I  probably shouldn&#8217;t do chats anymore &#8212; not because I screwed up but  because it&#8217;s dumb to waste points better served in a larger format such  as this column. The greatest golfer of his generation, and possibly  ever, has to rebuild three things &#8212; his family, career and brand &#8212;  while trying to win tournaments and recapture old glories. The most  private superstar athlete of his generation will live under unbearable  public scrutiny for the next few months at the very least. They are the  same person. And if you claim that you can predict exactly how that  person will emerge from this twisted mess … you are lying.</p>
<p style="font-style: italic;">Bill Simmons is a columnist for ESPN.com  and the author of the recent New York Times best-seller, &#8220;<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Book-Basketball-NBA-According-Sports/dp/034551176X/ref=amb_link_85418331_1?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&amp;pf_rd_s=center-4&amp;pf_rd_r=0JJ43SAZ0YBCMRBCWY7N&amp;pf_rd_t=101&amp;pf_rd_p=493026531&amp;pf_rd_i=390919011">The  Book of Basketball</a>.&#8221; For every Simmons column and podcast, check  out <a href="http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/simmons/index">Sports  Guy&#8217;s World</a>. Follow him on Twitter at  http://twitter.com/sportsguy33.</p>


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		<title>Is John Daly Really Quitting?</title>
		<link>http://www.golfclubswarehouse.com/blog/golf-news/is-john-daly-is-really-quitting</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Feb 2010 18:44:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>gcw</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Is John Daly is Really Quitting?


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div><strong>by</strong> Tom Edrington</p>
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<div><img src="http://cdn.bleacherreport.com/images_root/images/photos/000/811/793/96214725.jpg.14300_feature.jpg?1264882729" alt="HONOLULU - JANUARY 15:  John Daly waits to play a shot  during the second round of the Sony Open at Waialae Country Club on  January 15, 2010 in Honolulu, Hawaii.  (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty  Images)" width="340" height="235" /> <span>Sam Greenwood/Getty Images</span></div>
<p>John Daly is not quitting, he&#8217;s not leaving  the PGA Tour.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s what his most visible sponsor is saying.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re not worried about his retiring,&#8221; said Larry Jackson Saturday  at the PGA Merchanise Show in Orlando, Fl.</p>
<p>Jackson, the CEO of Loudmouth Golf, the company that dresses Daly in  those attention-getting trousers, was chuckling when he discussed the  &#8220;breaking news&#8221; that was reported late Friday on the Golf Channel.</p>
<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t compete anymore,&#8221; a somber Daly told the Golf Channel in the  parking lot at Torrey Pines.</p>
<p>&#8220;John&#8217;s an emotional guy. He&#8217;s not quitting, he&#8217;s already said he  just needs some time on his Facebook page,&#8221; Jackson said. &#8220;He will be  back. He&#8217;ll be back at the AT&amp;T.&#8221;</p>
<p>Jackson said that Daly is a good match with the fast-growing company,  Loudmouth Golf. &#8220;Actually it was Jim McMahon who introduced him (Daly)  to us,&#8221; Jackson said. &#8220;John was playing in a pro-am with Jim and saw how  much attention he was getting by wearing our clothes.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s dropped 105 pounds,&#8221; Jackson said. &#8220;He started at 286 and is  now 181. We were sending him waist size 44 last April, we sent him  34s this month.&#8221;</p>
<p>Jackson said he&#8217;s was bombarded with calls and texts after Daly&#8217;s  interview on the Golf Channel.</p>
<p>&#8220;Just give him a little time and he&#8217;ll keep playing. Like I said,  we&#8217;re not worried at all,&#8221; Jackson said, smiling.</p>


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