Tag Archives: Tiger Woods

The Humane Society for Tiger

Somewhere we knew it was pointless right? To watch an interview with Tiger Woods and expect it to be micromanaged by a bunch of suits who keep reminding Tiger that they know exactly how to work this situation. We can’t keep falling for the illusion that this interview will be an exclusive must see programming. That you will somehow see something you’ve never seen.

Yet there I was, tuning in. Purely curiosity keeping me glued in front of the television, watching something scripted and so bland that all I could do was shake my head and be mad at myself for getting sucked in.

Its Tiger that brings us there. The superstar that makes us watch. The athlete who’s name rings out from this land to the Netherlands. No one can help being pulled in, your just there because its Tiger and you know you have to be there because you don’t want to be clueless during water cooler talk time.

The weekend offered us some of the best upsets during the first round of the NCAA tournament and yet here we are discussing Tiger’s 5 minute excercise in having no opinion.

Here’s what I don’t understand: what more do you want him to say? What more do you think he will give you if you ask him in 10 million different ways about the Thanksgiving night and about his therapy sessions? This guy has been trained by professionals to avoid answering anything that may give off an impression or lead someone down a lead small enough to uncover a bigger hole altogether.

Its no that he’s incapable, its that he will give it his all to be as vague as possible and here’s the thing we do know about him: if he puts his mind to it, he will succeed. He’s an elite athlete, a person who dominates a single player sport so thoroughly that he holds the fate of his sport in his hands.

When he steps onto Augusta for the Masters, he will do so with the entire sporting world watching his every move and yet he won’t blink or allow himself to flinch. He will absorb the first few boos and keep it moving because that’s who he is. He’s great at what he does and what he puts his mind to.

So who cares? He cheated on his wife multiple times and now he’s paying the price publically. He’s not the only person in America that’s done this though. He’s not alone in that demographic even in the tiny bubble that is Hollywood. Almost every star allows the fame to overtake any responsibility they have to their family and gives in to temptation. If he had tried at marriage he wouldn’t have cheated. He didn’t try thus he failed.

So what am I rooting for? I’m rooting for humanity to take over in Tiger. For him to show his human side. I am hoping he falls off the wagon and runs into a Houlihans and talks up a blonde bimbo and she becomes woman number I-think-America-lost-count-already. At least that way I will know he’s not some programmed machine. Then I will care. Then I will tune into his press conferences and actually hold out hope for Tiger. Then and only then. Until then he can keep his red and black sunday uniform. Give me a hat turned backwards, 5 days worth of scruff on his face and some bloodshot eyes and reeking of alcohol after coming straight from a 12 hour casino run. Give me humanity Tiger or save your breath.

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TIGER TIGER WOODS YA’LL

By now we’ve all had time to properly digest the Tiger Woods press conference.  The ink has run dry on the shot gun analyses from sportswriters, and  bloggers  throughout America.

So what can I, presume to understand from all this?

Let’s break the press conference down Dr. Jack Ramses style first:

The Reason for the press* conference: To offer up a sincere apology.  A believable apology.  To give the American public what its been dying for: Tiger in a room full of people, with a microphone saying I’m sorry for the world to see.
*= the term press being used very loosely since none of them were allowed to speak.  They were expected to sit there and just listen and then hopefully offer up a golf clap of sorts when Tiger gave the cue by picking up his papers and arranging them, sighing loudly for effect and then thanking everyone.

The Content: A thirteen minutes-and-change speech delivered by Tiger admitting to indiscretion in his marriage, his bad decision making skills, and his hope that none of us blame anything on his wife Elin.

The Hope: That America accepts his apology and the forgive and forgetting part begins.

Ok, so those are the basics.  I actually laughed as I read so called respected sportswriters talk up Tiger’s apology.  They spent a few hundred words describing Tiger and their thoughts on whether he was truthful or not.

Well, I’m not an expert.  I don’t pretend to know these players and when I make judgements, its purely from an outsider’s perspective so take that as you may.

A year ago after the A-Rod steroid scandal broke, I wrote that he was like a cyborg.  A manufactured being, brought to you by corporate America, to push products and a certain mindset we as Americans want to have:  perfection.  We accept that not everyone is perfect but it should be strived for and thus we need examples of this mindset.  We give you, A-Rod.  We give you Tiger Woods.

Tiger Woods is the creation of a company ad campaign.  He has no other identity than that.  He’s told what to say, when to smile, where to look before the flashbulbs light up and has plenty of highly paid professionals helping him at all times.

Those professionals are paid to protect his image.  That image is what companies partially pay for.  They pony up the dough for the best in each sport because they only will associate with champions.  Thus if you’re a champion, chances are you’re on the payroll.

But guys like this are so sad to see.  They’re real, but in many ways they aren’t.  I can’t possibly see myself hanging out with Tiger Woods and I can’t possibly see Tiger Woods having a posse or a close group of friends he hangs out with regularly since an early age.  All that has been cut from his life if he ever had one to begin with.  Could you imagine hanging out with Tiger at a bar?

Sample convo:

::pretty girl walks by::**

**= the premise being that Tiger hasn’t hit that already.

You:  Tiger, did you just see that? I bet you I can get that girl’s number before you.***
Tiger:  She seems like a wonderful human being.  I’m just going to go out there and try my best and hope that its enough.

***= I know I know, who am I fooling challenging Tiger’s game.  But its remarkable and goes to show you that even a robot can score in todays society with women as long as your famous.  As always boys, the lesson here is that there are plenty of emotionally unstable women ready to be taken advantage of.

The theory of these manufactured athletes is not something I haven’t toyed with for years.  It seemed as if athletes of a certain stature always behaved in a certain way and never differed from that path.  They were understated, handsome, clean cut, and always a willing participant in a photo-op with a huge smile painted on; as if they were part of some exclusive club.****

****= The others you ask?  Currently playing athletes: Peyton Manning, Roger Federer, Lebron James (the advanced form of their species), Kobe Bryant, David Beckham, and Alex Rodriguez.  That’s it.

So fast forward to last Thursday when the world tuned in to see a sad looking Tiger look the camera dead on with his puppy dog eyes and ask the world for forgiveness.  Let’s see, was he really saying i’m sorry to all the parents of children who may have at one time idolized him?  Was he really saying I’m sorry for all the kids who may have looked at him as an example to be followed?  No, he was apologizing to the sponsors he let down.  For all the people who had placed him in a position of royalty.

When the camera went out and the presser had to continue through a side lens angle which showed his mother sitting about as still as Andrew Guiliani during his father Rudy’s inauguration as Mayor of New York city*****, Bill Simmons made a funny yet applicable joke: he wondered if it would show him as plugged into the wall socket.

*****- If you are confused as to the reference I just made, here’s a visual idea of what I’m talking about: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WtvGJwEWbSQ

But here’s the reality of the press conference.  It changed nothing about him.  How could it?  It was all part of the script.  He’s still being handled.  How do I know this?  Because he invited a room full of yes men/women designed to make people think that everyone agreed with every word that was said from a speech written for him by highly trained PR people who were following a plan.  That plan is simple and it happened with Alex Rodriguez last year.

Last year he was a cheater and a liar and a player who most would’ve considered a pariah.  When he made his apology he did so and then had hip surgery that would sideline him for a few weeks enabling him to both recover physically and publicly.  The rest of the season is history.  They won a championship due to some of A-Rod’s late game heroics and he was finally the hero that many had long thought he would be.

So the path has been laid before him for Tiger to follow.  He hinted at his return but remained vague as to when it would be.  But it will certainly be this summer.  That’s where the healing process begins.  Because for anyone who follows sports knows, that these are pardonable offenses.  Our society disapproves of extra marital affairs, but never shuts someone of Tiger’s stature out.  In a few months all the ink will run out and we’ll forget.  In a few years he’ll raise his 18th and 19th major trophies and we’ll celebrate his career.  There might be a small reference to this episode in his life but it won’t last.

In the end, it doesn’t matter if he meant what he said.  It wouldn’t surprise me if he said he didn’t believe a single word he wrote.  Because even if he admitted that, I wouldn’t be foolish to consider that its another part of the con job that Tiger’s team is trying to pull on us to make us believe something he’s not.  He’s not like us.  He never was.  Its time we stopped fooling ourselves into thinking that way.

Is he sorry for what he did?  Who cares?  Is he human?  No.  So why should we hold him to our standards?

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SAVE IT!

I know we’re all taught as Knick fans to worship at the feet of King LeBron and made to think that nothing and no one is better than the young Anchor from Akron (corny but really at this point you can call him Boobie and his rep wouldn’t take a hit), but let’s call a spade a spade.

When Lebron walked off the court without shaking hands with his good buddy Carmello after losing a tough game in which the winning shot was made while Lebron was defending him, I’m sure Lebron apologists pointed to his fierce competitive nature as reason enough to bypass any sportsmanship responsibilities athletes of his stature may have.

Let’s face it, I don’t care if Delonte West didn’t shake Carmello’s hand, didn’t care where Big Z was or care THAT much about JJ Hickson’s feelings on not being traded at the deadline like many predicted he would for Amar’e Stoudemire.

But everyone cares about Lebron. From New York to Zimbabwe, he’s being watched and monitored and studied. Forget fishbowl existence, he’s an animal in a zoo. His life has been that way since he was in the seventh grade so none of this coverage over even the minute details of his life should be surprising.

So it shouldn’t surprise him that he’s getting negative feedback over it. He’s, if not the best, in the very limited spaced discussion with the best, he’s also the most hyped athlete ever. Take that sentence for what it is.

As the most hyped up athlete our media has ever had the pleasure of prematurely crowning, we want to see him live up to everything we envision of him. To break Bill Russell’s record for championships, to score 100 points in a game, and to average a triple double every year. All those records are still in play for Bron, and I suppose that its all a waiting game.

But here’s the thing: how are we supposed to expect Lebron to be this really great teammate, model citizen, and channel all his rage for 48 minutes and sometimes more and ask him to switch it off? We’re asking too much from a human being.

I’m not poo pooing his status. I’m not even going to pretend like I know what its like to be Lebron. But that’s just childish what he did to Melo last night.

In the words of Denny Green, “if you wanna crown then crown his ass!”. But hold him to equally high standards. This isn’t even that difficult.

The benefit of being a Michael Jordan, or Peyton Manning is that they don’t play by normal rules. They are supposed to come through in clutch situations, and when they don’t, there’s always someone else there to take the fall.

That wasn’t Peyton’s fault on that interception at the Super Bowl, it was Reggie Wayne’s because he seemed hesitant coming out of his break.

That’s not Lebron’s fault that his team didn’t win or that he slipped coming out of his break, his teammates didn’t support him enough and besides, the ref blew that foul call.

Its interesting how we approach the elite in the game on simple issues like sportsmanship. The flip side is when athletes cheat on their wives like Tiger Woods and golfers he routinely beat come out of the woodwork and ask for apologies for the “gentlemanly” game of golf.

Let me repeat, I don’t agree with Tiger’s decision to apologize on his own terms today, but only because I don’t know why he needs to apologize to anyone BUT his wife. He did this to her, not anyone sitting in that room.

But the standards should be the same. We as a public shouldn’t let athletes on an elite level get away with childish behavior when we expect everyone on the team to be acting a certain way. If this happened in reverse and Carmello walked off the court, he would be labeled a thug and maybe worse.

Why’s that you ask? Well there’s precedent for this: think MJ and Isiah. The long running fued took a turn for the worse when Isiah famously staged the walk out when the Bulls finally beat the Pistons and Isiah, who many consider to be the greatest PG ever, was shunned leading to his exclusion from the 92 Dream Team. One was a bigger star than the other. Its as simple as that. Jordan had star power over Zeke.

We have built up Lebron in our minds as this warrior and champion. We can’t imagine him not winning a title or breaking records. What we should do is let the man win first before we give him his just due.

Until then, let’s call it like we see it. If he’s a sore loser, that’s what he is. Save me your excuses.

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