Daily Player Interviews

DARREN CLARKE

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Thank you, Darren, for joining us for a few minutes. Great day out there. Talk about what things are going right for you.

DARREN CLARKE: Pretty much everything. I played pretty well after making bogey on No. 1 and gave myself a lot of chances. I got another couple of eagles today, covers up a few mistakes. But 64 is a lot better than I could ever shoot on this golf course, so I'm really pleased with my position coming in, and tomorrow I hope to give myself a chance to win.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER:  Is it your game plan to beat up the par 5s as much as you can? Five eagles on the par 5s this week.

DARREN CLARKE: This week on Tuesday I got a new driver, got a new R7 425, a brand new one, and I hardly ever put something straight into the bag, but this one was straight in, and it's making a huge difference to my distance off the tee. There's a couple of traps taken out of play, and that's helped a great deal on the par 5s. Any time you make a couple of eagles a week on the par 5s it's pretty good. I've made five; I don't know what's going on, but another couple tomorrow would be nice.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER:
. You're having a better week this week. What's going on?

DARREN CLARKE: Lack of beer, if you want to know the truth (laughter). I could give you a diplomatic answer, but I prefer to give you the truth.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER:
Why is that?

DARREN CLARKE: Because usually this is a very relaxing week for me at the end of a very hard season. It's always very nice to be here, and I do enjoy the tournament, much more off the course than on the course in the past. Whereas this week, unfortunately when I got off to that 65 on Thursday, that was my week over (laughter). I'm just saving my 77 for tomorrow (laughter).

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Are you disappointed in that 65?

DARREN CLARKE: The 65 on Thursday? It wrecked my plans for the whole week (laughter).

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Starting off with a bogey wasn't the greatest start. How did that happen?

DARREN CLARKE:
I hit a good tee shot into the fairway, had 70 to the flag, and the flag was just five on. I tried to cut a little lob wedge off the right?hand slope and bring it back. Instead of it bouncing left, it bounced right on a slope that's coming back the opposite way. Just into the first cut and had a funny tort of lie, didn't get it very close, hit it to ten feet and missed.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Let's go through your round.

DARREN CLARKE: Well, you got 1 there where I made bogey. No. 2, I hit driver, 4?iron onto the green to about 40 feet, two putts. No. 5, hit driver just in the right rough, cut a little 5-wood from hardly anywhere, 216, hit it three feet in for eagle.
No. 6, I hit driver, 9-iron onto the green to about 15 feet in for birdie. No. 7, I drove it in that stupid thing in the middle of the fairway, into that rough, took a penalty drop, hit it on the green and hit 8?iron to 15 feet, holed it for par.No. 11, hit driver, 4-iron to about eight feet behind the hole, holed it for eagle. No. 13, I hit 3-wood off the tee, and then hit a 5-wood to the edge of the green, two-putted for birdie.

No. 16, hit 3-wood off the tee, had a so-so lie, chopped a little 5-wood from 235, pitched it about three feet behind the hole and it went to about 20 feet, missed.
On the last, hit 3-wood off the tee, sand wedge onto the green, spun it back to about 12 feet, holed it for birdie.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: How do you know when you're playing well? Is it because you're hitting it close, or do you judge by your score?

DARREN CLARKE:
I won three weeks ago, lost in a playoff last week, so I'm playing all right; won Taiyeiho Masters and then Sun City, when Jim Furyk chipped in on me.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: How close was your pitch mark on 16?

DARREN CLARKE: That much right behind it (indicating two feet).

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: What's your schedule for the West Coast coming up in the wintertime?

DARREN CLARKE: At the moment, my first tournament is going to be Riviera, Nissan, and then La Costa after that, and then going to Doral after that. But for obvious reasons, my schedule is all over the place. I don't know what I'm going to do, but that's what I'm planning to do.
I'm starting in Qatar, Dubai, last week of January, first week of February and then over here.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: No Abu Dhabi?

DARREN CLARKE: No.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: 
You're not taking this week so seriously that you're going to the range, are you?

DARREN CLARKE: Only before play, thank you. I've actually worked quite hard before play, but not afterwards. I've hit some putts every day after I played, but that's about it.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: You showed up ten minutes before your tee time last year on the range.

DARREN CLARKE: Did I? That was a bit early, wasn't it (laughter)? I remember last year on the 1st tee in the last round, after having a rather salubrious evening, to put it bluntly, the guy was calling my name, the starter was calling my name, and he just about got to Darren, and my ball was in the air on the 1st tee, so I'll give him a little bit longer tomorrow.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Does it surprise you at all to be playing this well this late in the year? You've had kind of a strange year.

DARREN CLARKE:
I haven't played an awful lot, it doesn't really surprise me. I've played here before, and all the other guys have had long hard seasons. I've had a hard season but not in golfing terms, so I haven't played an awful lot, so maybe it's a little bit easier for me.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: You call London, the time difference is so great, it would be too late now, but in the mornings to you talk to your wife before you tee off?

DARREN CLARKE: Yeah, they're eight hours ahead.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Is this just free money this week, Darren, or is there something special about coming here?

DARREN CLARKE: Well, it's Tiger's event, and Tiger is a very good friend. It's another one of the tournaments where you've got an opportunity to pit against him and try and beat him. He's the best player in the world, so any time we get that chance we want to take it.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: When you beat him at Match Play what was that like?

DARREN CLARKE:
He was feeling sorry for me. He let me win that (laughter).

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Is that what you did in the other eight majors?

DARREN CLARKE: Yeah. "Well, you can have them. I don't want them."

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MICHAEL CAMPBELL

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Thank you, Michael, for joining us for a few minutes. Great finish there with those two birdies to hang in there. Why don't you just talk about going into Sunday.

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: Yes, once again, it's been a roller coaster ride the last couple of days.  Great start; I hit my Heaven Wood on the 2nd hole to about two feet.

And then I lost the putt there for a while. 4, 5 and 7 were just - 4 was two good shots to about 15 feet and three-putted from there. On the par 5 at the 5th hole, good drive and good second shot really and came up short and caught a bad lie, and made bogey there. Then in the bushes on 7 with my drive, then made a penalty shot and then made bogey there. Then nice shot on 8 hit 4-iron to probably ten feet.
Then I hit driver, 5-iron on the 11th hole to probably a foot. Then another three-putt from nowhere on 13, and then strong finish. Once again, it's a mixed bag of good and bad and other stuff, too.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: I missed 13. What was that?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: 3-wood, 3-wood, front of the green and into the bunker, smashed out and three-putted.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Everybody seems to be driving into that thing in the
middle of the fairway on 7. Is that the bush that you went into?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: Yeah, it's 300, so for me it's right between my driver and 3-wood. I try to miss it. Actually sometimes if you aim for things, you think you'll just push it or pull it, and it went straight into the bushes. Next time I'll aim right or left.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: What makes sense to you, a rock in the middle of the fairway or the cork trees in the middle of the fairway at Valderrama?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: None do, really. I think it's very penal to have those sort of things in the middle of fairways. I think maybe a bunker or so and then you have a chance to smash it out onto the green, but not a rock or cork trees. It makes you think twice on the tee. You can't just smash driver down there 310 or 320 yards. You've got to think about your tee shot. It does actually make you think about the shot at hand.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Have you aimed for it all three days?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL:
Yeah.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: . You just got lucky today?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: Yeah. I hit it too straight.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER:
You opened 3, 3, 3. You've five shots ahead after 2, and within five holes it's tied. I mean, that's golf, right?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: Well, that's this golf course. You've got two reachable par 5s. First five holes, as you can see my record on the 5th hole is pathetic. It's 2-over. It's a par 5 you can reach in two with driver and 3-iron. Hopefully tomorrow I can rectify that and make eagle. It's a course where you can get on a good roll very, very easily. The 6th hole was a driver and a flick, so I got off to a pretty hard start.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Whereabouts did your second shot go on 5? Too far right by the tree?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: No, it was between the bunker and the green, and I caught a really bad lie. It was sitting pretty deep and I had to chunk it out and flopped it and skulled my chip about ten feet, missed the putt.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: How important was closing with the two birdies?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: Very important. For me, if you look at 17 and 18 yesterday, I played them in ten shots and today I played them in five shots. It would have been nice to have that finish yesterday. I wanted to get close. I knew that Darren was playing well, and I didn't want Darren to get too far away from me, and I knew if I birdied the last two holes I might have a chance to even take the lead.
But he obviously birdied the last hole, played great today, so all credit to Darren.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: When you hit your tee shot on 17, did you think you were in trouble? Did you think it would come off the hill like it did?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL:
Of course (laughter). It was a horrible shot. That's why I gave it the old one-handed "here we go" type of thing. The golf gods smiled on me and gave me a little bounce to the right ten feet and I made birdie. It could have been disastrous.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Didn't you used to wear red socks for luck?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: That was about ten years ago.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Why did you give up on that? It wasn't bringing you any luck?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL:
It did for a while, yeah. At the British Open I wore red socks.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: In '95?

MICHAEL CAMPBELL: '95, and then I started missing cuts, so I changed to black (laughter). They're black and gray right now.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Thank you.

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PADRAIG HARRINGTON

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Thank you, Padraig, for joining us for a few minutes. Nice solid round out there and great position going into Sunday. Talk about the day a little bit.

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: It was obviously erratic the first day, not very happy with the swing. Played a little bit better the second day. But I was a bit erratic today, not 100 percent confident with what I was doing. I started - got a few breaks, started making a few birdies on the back nine and just kept going and really tried not to think too much about it.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Who's in the last group tomorrow?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: Not me. Michael and Darren. It's the guy that holes the putt first.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: So he holed it first?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: Yep, so he was the first 13?under in.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: How close did you hit it on 18?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: We both hit it about 12 feet.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: He was away?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: He was away. Actually he was on the fringe of the green. It actually would have been very close. He went first because he was off the green. If we were both on the green, we probably would have had to look at it.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: You said yesterday you like coming here because of Tiger and because of the charities that it helps. Because you won here, does that give you a lot of confidence coming back and playing?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: Obviously the golf course suits me. There's something about it, something out there that suits me. You know, I've obviously performed very well on it. I have a good track record. Maybe it's the last event of the year. I don't know, it's a tricky enough golf course, and I do tend to play those sort of courses well if I can stay patient because there is a lot of birdies and eagles to be made out there, but there's also some bogeys and double bogeys. It can be quite a frustrating golf course. That tends to be one of my strengths is to stay patient, and that's probably why I have performed well here in the past.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Have you ever hit it into that rock on No. 7?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: I did it on Thursday, straight into the middle of the rock on Thursday, right at it, had to chip it out.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: You were able to chip it out?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: Yeah, I was actually - normally it's never been such a big issue, that rock, until this year. It's sucking everybody in this year for some reason. I even hit a 3?wood today off the tee and I hit it past the rock. I wasn't sure I would do that. For some reason the hole has played a little bit shorter this year, maybe a change of direction in wind.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: All three leaders have been in there at least once.

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: There you go.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Do you take the theory that if you hit it straight, no ball ever goes straight so aim for the rock?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: No, I tried that already. I was aiming left of it today and I hit it right (laughter). I shouldn't tell you that, should I?

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: We watched you and Monty just smoke them at Oakland Hills. You guys had a great time up there, you were just in sync. Are you going to lobby for you guys to start off this year and be a pair like you were last time, especially since it's on your side of the pond?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: Depends how Monty is playing (laughter).

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Somehow he'll get in, won't he?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: He's already in. I'm the one that has to try and get in. We'll wait and see. You never know how these things go. It could be more appropriate at the time; Monty is obviously very experienced, I have some experience, so maybe it might be more appropriate to split us up. Who knows what's going to happen? Who knows what the captain is going to be thinking? It could be quite possible one of us is playing quite poorly. It's not possible, I think Monty is already qualified, he's got enough points up. But I think in my case I have to do it, so maybe I won't even be there, you never know. We'll have to wait and see.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: I don't know how much you pay attention to the U.S. team since you've been -

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: I haven't paid attention.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: In the matches have been played already, have you found it curious that Tiger has gone through so many partners in the Ryder Cups that you've played, and did you take note at all to his successful pairing with Furyk, which was sure to be another one at K Club?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: I saw The Presidents Cup and I heard the commentators pointed that out in picking the team for Tom Lehman. You know, who knows what's going to happen when it comes around. As I said, it looks like Jim is - I think anybody would like to possibly be partnered with Jim in four-ball or foursomes. I don't think anybody would be turning Tiger Woods down as their partner, either, so it seems like an ideal accommodation.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: You don't think you'll see Tiger?Mickelson?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: You've got to remember that it was Phil and David Toms that played so well at the Belfry, so there was a great - they were a great partnership there. Wasn't it Phil and David Toms? Yeah, so they're not talking about it now. Phil had a new partner at the Presidents Cup.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: DiMarco.

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: There you go, and yet he played very well at the Belfry with David Toms.  We can all pick the team here. When it comes around, who knows what the week will bring. Only eight guys play those first couple of matches. Eight guys play, so you have to pick the guys who are playing well of the 12 on your team. You can't start bringing guys in, or maybe you can. That's up to the captain to decide whether he wants to go with an established partnership with one of them slightly off or bring in a rookie who's playing great golf. We'll have to wait and see.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Where do you think that this Ryder Cup will rank as far as sporting events in Ireland in history?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: I would like to say it's possible it's going to be the biggest occasion, but we had the Special Olympics there a year and a half ago or two years ago now, and that was huge in the country. It's hard to say. I think it might be - it's hard to see more people being involved than there was at that event. It would be right up there, if not the No. 1, it would be with that, with the Special Olympics. I don't think it's possible to have an event bigger than that was, so it's right there with it.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Are we going to see you playing more on the West Coast this year, in the upcoming year, more in the U.S. in general?

PADRAIG HARRINGTON:
I'm playing the exact same; more or less the same tournaments I played this year I will play next year. You know, give or take - I didn't play I didn't like this year, so that's a good sign that I'll go back.

JOAN v.T. ALEXANDER: Thank you. Appreciate your time.

TIGER WOODS

Q. Did you think you might be able to get it to a good number to have a chance for tomorrow?

TIGER WOODS: No. I forget what I did on the 1st hole. I drove it down there probably right next to 5 fairway, and there was a creek down there somewhere, and somehow made some unbelievable par. Then the next tee shot almost pumped it out of bounds left, so I made par there. It wasn't exactly one of the most positive starts of my round.

Q. I know it's December, but you're still pretty frustrated?

TIGER WOODS:
I am, but realistically, it's been a long season, and this week I just haven't capitalized on my opportunities. I had opportunities, hit balls in there tight, and I've missed the majority of them.

Q. That lie you had on 18, how good was that shot?

TIGER WOODS: It's indicative of how the week has been right there. I had pumped just a perfect little flat 3-wood down there trying to keep it below the wind, hit it right down the middle on the tee shot, then I get down there and I'm standing behind the trees. I tried to play some type of hooky wedge and didn't quite do that, and then ended up with a very interesting third lie.

Q.
Is that a textbook way to play 17?

TIGER WOODS: Yeah, that was probably indicative - another one of how it's been. That was the worst shot I hit all day, and I made 2. I don't know how that works out. Some of the holes I've just hit absolutely perfect shots and walk out of there making par or bogey.

Q. It's rude to win your own tournament every year, though, too, isn't it?

TIGER WOODS
: Why (laughter)? I'm selfish that way.

Q. Darren Clarke has four eagles this week. Can you talk about him and the par 5s? He says he never plays well here, but he's playing well this week.

TIGER WOODS: You can get it going here. I'll tell you what, the par 5s are all accessible this week. With the fairways being a little faster than they normally are, you can get to every one of them. Like 11 today is a perfectly accessible pin. You hit any kind of iron shot on there short of the hole, it rolls up there stiff.

And 16 is a tough one, but you can actually hit the ball pretty close there, as well, pin high. I think the guys will be able to take it pretty deep today.

Q. You're saying the way you're playing you don't have 62 in you tomorrow?

TIGER WOODS: I do. It's just, am I going to be 18 holes or 16 or 15. Hopefully it'll be all 18 tomorrow.

Q. Any changes for next year, equipment-wise or -

TIGER WOODS: Well, I put the 5-wood in. I'll have a new set of irons by the time I come back. These irons are a little worn out. That's it.

Q. Are you a goal setter? I know you have six wins, two majors this year. Are you a goal setter for a 62, that kind of thing?

TIGER WOODS: Always.

Q. Care to share?

TIGER WOODS: I just won four tournaments this year.

Q. (Question regarding Annika Sorenstam).

TIGER WOODS: I think we're both looking pretty good if we both put the pieces together. Annie, when she gets it going, she's tough to beat, and I feel like when I get it going, I'm tough to beat.

Q. Do you look at venues like for the British Open at St. Andrews, this could be the year? Do you look at this year, Medinah, I've done well, Winged Foot? Do you look at that type of thing?

TIGER WOODS: I do a little bit, but to be honest with you, if you've got your game on that particular week, it doesn't matter what golf course you play. Some golf courses let in more players than others, but I think if you've got your game together for that particular week, mind and body and everything working together that week, there's no reason why you can't win.

Q.
You said this is one of the best years with the majors for you or this is the best you've played at all four majors. How would you rate the way you played, not your results, but the way you played at all four majors?

TIGER WOODS: I think it's one of the best years I've ever had, considering all the changes I've made this year and in my swing and things that I've had to battle through. I think - I'm very proud of them.

Q. When you look at 30 coming up, do you see your career and a new act, like your 20s are over? Do you look at it that way, like what can you accomplish in your 30s?

TIGER WOODS: I never look at it that way. I just look at the fact that I just want to become better next year than I was this year. I'm looking forward to the off season, to sit back and take a serious look at what I need to work on to be ready for Augusta next year and then the next three majors after that.

Q. When you were 20 did you think before you turned 30 you would be at ten majors?

TIGER WOODS:
No, I didn't think I would have won this many majors in my 20s, or this many tournaments around the world. My game back when I turned pro, I wasn't very precise. I could hit it a long ways and I could be streaky, but I wasn't very precise. I had a lot of work to do, and I was able to do that in the 20s.

Q. If you had the game you brought in '96, what does your record look like right now?

TIGER WOODS: Oh, God, maybe one or two majors. Maybe. Total wins, probably less than half of what I've got right now.

Q.
These changes, did you think you needed to make them, or was it in conjunction with Butch and Hank and guys like your father, or did you think to yourself, "I need to do this?"

TIGER WOODS: Deep down you look at yourself and you see weaknesses. You see shots you should be able to hit but you can't hit. Why can't I control my flight each and every time? If I'm trying to hit a two-yard draw, why can't I hit a two-yard draw? If I want to try and knock five, six feet off of my flight, why can't I do that? These are things that you have to know you can do, and I wasn't able to do it consistently. I could do it every now and then, and every now and then is not going to cut it when it comes to the majors. I had to get better for those.

Q. Do you seek out advice or do you know what to work on?

TIGER WOODS: It's both. I know deep down inside I know what to work on, and about 90 percent of the time it coincides with what their thoughts are, and occasionally I may miss a couple things, and that's when it's good to have eyes you can trust.

Q.
So with these changes, do you think that you're reaching that point where you're doing all that you're capable of?

TIGER WOODS: You never know. When your career is all said and done and you rack the cue and you go home, you can say I was at my peak then, but until then, you don't know because you're in it.

Q. When you decided to make the changes, how long did it take you to pull the trigger on putting the gears in motion? Was it pretty quick or did you take a while to convince yourself? You said you knew deep down -

TIGER WOODS:
About a day.

Q. Really?

TIGER WOODS: Uh-huh, because you've got to plan out the process, how many weeks is it going to be on this, a couple months to work on that, to get that better, probably won't be ready for this, will I be good enough, well, maybe. And then say a year out from here, I should be able to be at this point, two years should be at this point. Yeah, it's a lot of planning, and you've got to sit down and take a hard look at it and it takes a long time to plan it out, but you sit back and you say I've accomplished my plan over the last six months. It's pretty exciting.

Q. Do you take more pride out of 16 at Augusta or the 3-wood, 8-iron combo on 18?

TIGER WOODS: Oh, by far 18 because after what happened at 16 then I hit a terrible 8-iron, then I hit a terrible tee shot on 17, hit a terrible second shot on 18. Then step up there in the playoff and hit my two best golf shots all week. I absolutely needed it the most, when I hadn't played three holes right yet, the last three holes, that's when I knew all the pieces that Hank and I were working on were there.

Q. When people look back at this Masters, what will they think?

TIGER WOODS: They'll think of 16. You can think of 16 all you want, but if 18 doesn't happen, then it's DiMarco's - what a great chip and a great putt he made on 18 and all these things.

Q. Do you go back and watch that tape from the '05 Masters?

TIGER WOODS:
Uh-huh.

Q. Do you find yourself fast forwarding through 16 so you can get to the 3-wood?

TIGER WOODS: Uh-huh. I look at why I hit the 8-iron left on 16 and what my thought process was. It's amazing because every time I've been in contention to win The Masters or have had the lead going into 16, I've pumped it on that top tier. I've made two pars but I hit it on the top tier. I didn't want to hit it on the top tier this time, so I didn't.

Q. Can you give us any insight on what may be on the menu for Tuesday night?

TIGER WOODS: Probably the same as last time, steak and chicken.

Q. After you won the British you were talking about it was kind of "in your face" with people who weren't on board with your swing changes. You were a little bit "in your face." Is that still your feeling or are you just kind of laying back off of that now?

TIGER WOODS: Well, now people understand what you're working on, why I made the changes in the first place to get here, to get to this point, where a bad day would be even par in a major championship. That's where you want to be. It took so much time and I took a lot of flak for making the changes. That's one reason I reacted the way I did at St. Andrews, because I went first-second-first. If I putted just normal, I felt like I hit the ball well enough to win the U.S. Open, I just putted atrociously that week. People weren't looking at my putting that week, they were just looking at my ball?striking. I had three majors in a row where I hit the ball really well.

Q. Obviously you want to be at the head of the class as far as this tournament, but if you look at the number of guys in the lead, the quality of the field, how much pride can you take in that?

TIGER WOODS: It's very exciting for them to take time out and come play. Obviously this late in the season everyone is a little tired. Some of the guys came from South Africa to play, and so it's nice for them to come out and support what we believe in, helping kids. So I thank all the players from the bottom of my heart for coming out here and supporting and playing, and then obviously the fans. We have great support each and every year we play.

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