Tiger Woods had an opportunity to be a part of this year’s U.S. Open without playing in it, but the 15-time major champion turned down the offer. Dan Hicks revealed that NBC Sports reached out to make Woods an analyst during next week’s event at Torrey Pines in Southern California.
“Yeah, in fact, that’s exactly the line that I was thinking,” Hicks said on the NBC Sports media conference call. “We were all thinking is how good that would be, who better, if he couldn’t be there to play it, to voice it and have him a part of the show. But we were rebuffed.”
Hicks dove deeper into the discussion with reporters. He gets why Woods wouldn’t want to make the trip to the course where he famously won the 2008 U.S Open.
“He didn’t want to do it, and I totally understand his situation. There is a lot going on in his world right now, and there’s also a part of Tiger that doesn’t want to become this, I don’t want to, for lack of a better word, a sideshow at an event where we should be concentrating on what’s happening.”
Woods has been on the mend over the past few months due to the February car crash he was involved in that required major surgery on his right leg. Steve Stricker has asked Woods to be a vice-captain on the September Ryder Cup team, but that is still up in the air. Golf’s most famous figure is slowly making his way back to normal life, let alone playing the sport he loves.
“Also, I really believe that if you said yes to something, it would just be a non-stop parade of asks, and he would have to just, you know, start telling everybody no,” Hicks said. “So, yeah, it would have been fantastic to have Tiger a part of it in that sense, but I understand that what’s going on in his world that he wanted to kind of keep it low-key and stay out of the limelight for this one.”