Throughout the day on Tuesday, the whole sporting world, and the non-sporting world for that matter, were on edge after news broke that Tiger Woods had been in a car crash out in California. He had emergency surgery to try to repair significant injuries to his ankle and right leg. Woods’ foundation released an update on the situation Tuesday night.
When this news broke, many thought back as to how Woods had impacted their life through watching him dominate professional golf. One of those people was Nick Wright, one of the hosts of First Things First on FS1. Wright said Woods helped him bond with his grandfather when he was a kid.
“In 1996, I remember the room I was in in my house. My grandfather calls me from Florida. I am in my dad’s office and he says you have to turn on the television. There’s this kid who is going to be the greatest golfer ever. From that moment, it was like a drug and I was hooked.”
Wright said that for a three-year period, Woods felt like one of the lone constants in his life.
“From 2006-2008, I think the only constant in my life was Tiger Woods. My parents got divorced, I had falling out and re-united with family members, I moved a couple of times and Tiger was it. In 2009, I signed up for Twitter and my first tweet ever was on Tiger’s car crash and then he was gone from my life for a long time.”
As Wright eventually became a father, he got to sit down with his daughter to watch Woods win at Augusta and they were able to connect over that.
“My youngest daughter and I bonded over watching him at The Masters. Made her want to pester me about golf lessons. Asking when we can watch Tiger.”
Later in the segment, Wright did mention it is not the time to talk about the GOAT argument when it comes to Tiger, but even if he doesn’t get to win another major, Tiger still that had last big golf moment.
“I’m like oddly choked up about this. I know he didn’t pass, I know he’s going to be okay, but it feels like a sports loss. I am so glad he got that Masters moment because if he doesn’t get another major, that walk to 18 at 2019 that was unlike anything we had seen in golf. It was a singular moment in golf history. If that’s his last significant golf memory, it was his great one.”