Tiger Woods is back.
The 42-year-old golf great won a PGA tournament for the first time in more than five years, marking a long-awaited turnaround after scandals and an injury-plagued drought cost him some of professional sports’ most lucrative sponsorships.
Woods captured the Tour Championship on Sunday at the East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. He brought home his 80th victory, two shy of Sam Snead’s record.
Woods’ arrival on the pro tour in the late 1990s was credited with boosting interest in the sport as television ratings soared. Sponsors began dropping him in December 2009 after he admitted to cheating on his wife; back injuries, surgery, and battles with substance abuse further derailed his career. He missed most of 2017 but had been improving this year, including a second-place in August at the PGA Championship, one of pro golf’s four major tournaments.
The comeback comes at a challenging time for the $70 billion golf industry, which is struggling to lure younger generations. His regained form has drawn more viewers this year, but whether he’ll help thwart the sport’s decline remains to be seen.
If anything, Woods may benefit financially by gaining new, or perhaps reviving old, sponsorships. While some sponsors like Nike Inc.’s apparel line remained throughout his travails, many -- like PepsiCo.’s Gatorade -- ended relationships with him over the years.
At one point late on Sunday, Woods was also close to winning the FedExCup, golf’s year-end $10 million prize. He last won a FedEx Cup in 2009, the same year his extramarital relationships started going public.
Woods entered Sunday’s final round with a three-stroke lead and was paired with Rory McIlroy, one of the game’s bright young stars. He also fended off Justin Rose, the world’s top-ranked player who began Sunday tied with McIlroy. Rose took the FedExCup.
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