AUGUSTA, Ga. — Breakfast with Tiger. Breakfast at Augusta. Set the alarm on your phone, and back it up with the kind of buzzer on your grandmother’s clock that could rouse the most sleep-deprived recreational golfer from a coma-like slumber.
Tiger Woods will wake up Sunday morning way before you do. He is 43 years old, a weathered veteran of more surgeries on his back and left knee than he could count. Woods is a notoriously light sleeper, and these days his creaky body needs hours of prep work before he even thinks of heading to the course and driving down Magnolia Lane.
If you are inclined to care about an extraordinary performer on an extraordinary stage under extraordinary circumstances, do not miss a minute of this. Rise and shine, make the coffee, do your own prep work by watching lesser golfers in threesomes go off split tees at 7:30 a.m. ET. Then behold what could be the most surreal scene in Masters history.
Woods teeing off among the leaders at 9:20 a.m., trying to win his first Masters title in 14 years and his first major championship in more than a decade before grabbing a late lunch.
“The reward for playing hard and doing all the things correctly — you get a nice little sleep come Sunday,” said Woods, who finished the third round at 11-under, two shots behind a man who has had his number, Francesco Molinari. “But that’s not going to be the case. We’ve got to get up early and get after it.”