Woods divorces caddie

Troubled golfer ends 12-year run with Williams

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JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Tiger Woods fired caddie Steve Williams on Wednesday, ending a 12-year relationship in which he won 72 times worldwide and 13 majors.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 21/07/2011 (5474 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Tiger Woods fired caddie Steve Williams on Wednesday, ending a 12-year relationship in which he won 72 times worldwide and 13 majors.

“I want to express my deepest gratitude to Stevie for all his help, but I think it’s time for a change,” Woods said on his website. “Stevie is an outstanding caddie and a friend and has been instrumental in many of my accomplishments. I wish him great success in the future.”

Woods did not say who would replace Williams or when he would return to golf.

Lynne Sladky / the associated press archives
Tiger Woods will no longer be taking direction from his longtime caddie Steve Williams (left).
Lynne Sladky / the associated press archives Tiger Woods will no longer be taking direction from his longtime caddie Steve Williams (left).

Williams, who previously worked for Raymond Floyd and Greg Norman, had worked the last three tournaments with Adam Scott. That included the last two majors, which Woods skipped while trying to recover from injuries to his left leg.

When asked over the weekend at the British Open if he was still working for Woods, Williams grinned and said, “Why would you ask a question like that?” He never answered the question but gave no indication that he would not caddie for Woods when he did return.

Turns out he had known for two weeks. Williams told The Associated Press he met with Woods in a board room at Aronimink after the final round of the AT&T National and Woods told him they would no longer work together. Williams said he chose to keep quiet out of respect to Scott, not wanting the Australian to face queries from the British media at Royal St. George’s.

The caddie posted a comment on his website that it “came as a shock.”

“Given the circumstances of the past 18 months working through Tiger’s scandal, a new coach and with it a major swing change and Tiger battling through injuries, I am very disappointed to end our very successful partnership at this time,” he said.

In a telephone interview, Williams said he was not upset by being fired and said he was proud to have been fired only twice in his 33 years as a caddie — by Woods and Norman.

“But I’m disappointed in the timing of it,” he said. “To be as loyal as someone can be, and with what one had to go through over the last 18 months … “

Williams said he would continue working for Scott.

News of the Woods-Williams split reverberated around the golf world. Masters champion Charl Schwartzel, in Vancouver for this week’s RBC Canadian Open, thinks the move might help the former No. 1 player.

“I think they have had such a good run,” Schwartzel said. “There’s a saying, a good thing will always come to an end sometime. I suppose they just needed a change. (Tiger) hasn’t been playing much. He hasn’t been playing well. Maybe it’s what he needs, a new environment.”

More than a caddie, Woods and Williams had been close friends. Both got engaged while on safari after The Presidents Cup in South Africa and they were in each other’s weddings. Woods played the New Zealand Open in 2002 and even took part in Williams’ other job as a race car driver.

The relationship began showing signs of strain after Woods crashed his car on U.S. Thanksgiving night, followed by stunning revelations of multiple extramarital affairs that led to Woods getting divorced. Woods’ ex-wife and Williams’ wife were close friends, and Williams went months before hearing anything from Woods.

In recent months, Williams was feeling out of touch during Woods’ rehabilitation. He was not aware that Woods did not plan to compete in the U.S. Open until after flying to the States from New Zealand, where Williams lives most of the year.

Williams has been labelled a bully over the years while working for Woods amid a constant circus, once tossing a camera into the pond at a Skins game when the photographer snapped a picture in the middle of Woods’ swing on the last hole, another time taking the camera from a fan at the 2004 U.S. Open that belonged to an off-duty policeman.

He also brought Woods’ undue attention toward the end of 2008 by making disparaging remarks about Phil Mickelson.

 

— The Associated Press

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