Woods tunes up at Greenbrier
Associated Press
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va.
A short ride to Sam Snead’s playground is what Tiger Woods considers a good way to get ready for the British Open.
Woods traveled 250 miles for his debut in The Greenbrier Classic on Thursday, a week after his two-shot win at the AT&T National he hosts in Bethesda, Md.
The quick trip to the Old White TPC Course, along with memories of the late Snead’s stories about his 47-year association with the historic Greenbrier resort, helped make Woods’ decision to compete in the 3-year-old tournament an easy one.
“This tournament since its inception has been absolutely incredible,” Woods said. “I knew about the history of [the resort] from Sam and how much he loved coming here and loved being here.”
The place might grow on Woods, too, if he can get his fourth victory this season and moves within seven of Snead’s record 82 PGA Tour wins.
Despite their age difference, Woods and Snead struck up a friendship, which was born at a golf outing near Los Angeles when Woods was 5. Snead played with a new group every two holes and Woods happened to be in the final one, making a pair of bogeys to Snead’s two pars.
“I still have the card at home,” Woods said.
Throughout the years, Woods and Snead had “countless dinners and conversations, and he was always so funny to be around and the stories he would tell and the needling — the needling was nonstop,” Woods said. “That was one of the neat things about Sam.”
It was at The Greenbrier where Snead got his first professional job in the mid-1930s. He was the resort’s golf pro until 1974 and returned as pro emeritus in 1993. Five years later he realized a lifelong dream of establishing a golf academy.
Snead died in 2002, leaving behind a clubhouse filled with his trophies, photos and other treasures.