Sports
Tiger Woods deeply distressed at attempted assassination of former president Donald Trump
Tiger Woods and former president Donald Trump have crossed paths many times, most notably when Trump awarded Woods the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2019. In the wake of an attempted assassination of Trump this past weekend, Woods said he couldn’t sleep and didn’t arrive in Scotland in the right frame of mind for this week’s British Open.
“I didn’t accomplish a lot because I wasn’t in the right frame of mind,” Woods told the BBC. “It was a long night [in the wake of the assassination attempt] and that’s all we watched the entire time on the way over here.”
Woods is preparing to play in the 152nd British Open at Royal Troon in Scotland and had little time for recuperation once he arrived.
“I didn’t sleep at all on the flight,” Woods said, “and then we just got on the golf course.”
Woods played an 18-hole round at Royal Troon alone on Sunday, practicing chipping and putting around the greens. He hasn’t won the British Open since 2006, and hasn’t played in a tournament since last month’s U.S. Open. This week’s tournament is likely to be the last Woods plays in 2024.
The British Open begins Thursday morning, with Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy listed as the favorites to capture the year’s final major.