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Woods Gets Back to Working at Keeping Head Still

Back to Basics: Tiger Woods rebuilds his disintegrating swing from the head down.

His work almost done for the day, Tiger Woods stood in the 18th fairway at Whistling Straits waiting for the green to clear when he asked, “What time is my press conference?”

Gone was the sense of dread that came with meeting the media — his first time back at the Masters or facing the British tabloids at St. Andrews. Back then, he braced for questions about the extramarital affairs that got him into this mess, a broken marriage, the endorsements he lost.

Now, the attention has mostly shifted back to his golf.

Some reprieve that turned out to be.

One reporter asked Tuesday how he had gone from the No. 1 player in the world to “one of the worst players on the planet.”

Once the clear-cut favorite in any major, Woods heads into the PGA Championship not knowing what to expect himself. He used to win nearly 30 percent of the time on the PGA Tour. Now it’s a question of whether he’ll make it past the cut on Friday.

And for good reason.

Just two days ago, Woods endured his worst tournament ever when he shot 18-over 298 at Firestone — the course where he had won seven times — and beat only one player in the 80-man field.

He has broken par only four times in his last 20 rounds. He has not come seriously close to winning any of his eight tournaments this year. Instead of looking relaxed and confident, he said he had one more practice round and “hopefully everything will come right.”

The only surprise was that Woods said he expected to be this bad much earlier.

“To be honest with you, I thought I would have been here a little bit sooner, with all that’s going on,” he said. “But somehow, I’ve been able to play a little bit better than I thought for a stretch, and then it finally caught up with me last week.”

Then, he clarified what he meant by “here.”

“Playing this poorly. For sure,” he replied. “With all the things that have gone on, for some reason I’ve been able to piece together rounds and keep it in there. There were two tournaments where I really hit it well, but other than that, I really haven’t done that well.”

His time is running out this year. If he plays poorly at Whistling Straits, he could be in jeopardy of missing the 125-man field at The Barclays that starts the PGA Tour playoffs. Woods is at No. 119, one point behind Bob Estes. To miss would be a five-week break from the PGA Tour, this time because he wasn’t eligible to play.

Woods has slipped to No. 10 in the Ryder Cup standings — only the top eight qualify after the PGA Championship — although he confirmed that he would play in the Oct. 1-3 matches if he were a captain’s pick.

Since turning pro, Woods has led the Ryder Cup standings every time.

“It happens to the best of them,” said Phil Mickelson, who revealed his own troubles Tuesday that he is coping with a form of arthritis. “We all have tough days. We’re not used to seeing it happen to him, but it does happen to the best players. So it’s just one of those things that over a long career, you’re eventually going to have a rough week or two.”

These are rough times, indeed, and one only had to see Woods practice at Whistling Straits to figure that out.

He did not hit a single shot from the tee or from the fairway without his caddie, Steve Williams, holding the back end of a wedge just over his right ear.

“Just to keep my head still,” Woods said. “It’s been moving all over the place.”

He also asked Sean Foley, the swing coach for Firestone winner Hunter Mahan and Sean O’Hair, to take a look at his swing. Foley twice videotaped him from the back and front along the front nine, and they had a quiet discussion on the 10th tee before Foley dropped back to spend time with one of his other clients.

Woods at least has kept his sense of humor.

He hit a 5-wood on the par-5 11th hole just right of the green, and with a hazy morning sky along Lake Michigan, Williams wasn’t sure where it went. “It’s in the fairway,” Woods told him. “Where else would you expect it to be?”

There are no expectations these days, when it comes Woods. No longer the sure thing in golf, he has never been more unpredictable.

“I’ll be honest, with the way he played the past week, guys feel like this is wide open — this tournament — and that’s not a feeling that a lot of guys have had before,” Paul Casey said.

Woods played with O’Hair and Mahan, who finished 30 shots ahead of the world’s No. 1 player at Firestone. They didn’t keep score, but if they had, “it was a little tighter than 30,” Mahan said with a smile.

“Like he said last week, it’s been a long year for him, and I think he’s totally going to get his game back,” Mahan said. “Last week he just looked lost, watching it from my perspective. He just didn’t look like he knew quite what to do, and for any player, that’s a very uncomfortable feeling.”

Woods has been No. 1 in the world for 270 consecutive weeks — a record — dating to the week before the 2005 U.S. Open. That ranking is in jeopardy again, with Phil Mickelson having the best shot, Steve Stricker the long shot.

Woods was in the middle of a swing change with Hank Haney when the PGA Championship last came to Whistling Straits in 2004. It was a struggle to make the cut, and he wound up in a tie for 24th, never in contention throughout the week.

That’s what constituted a bad week.

Now, Woods can’t hit a shot without his caddie making sure the head stays still. He had a swing coach videotape his swing, even though Woods never looked at it while on the course.

Think back to the start of the year, when Woods had not been seen in public since the Thanksgiving night car crash outside his home. The feeling was that once he returned to golf and started winning, everything would get back to normal.

He’s back playing golf. Things are far from normal.

DOUG FERGUSON, AP Golf Writer SHEBOYGAN, Wis.