Transcript
Introduction
"Tiger Woods was the kind of transcendent star that comes around about as often as Halley's Comet. By almost any measure, he is the most talented golfer who has ever lived, and arguably the greatest individual athlete in modern history.
For a 15-year span from August 1994, when he won his first of three consecutive U.S. amateur championships as an 18-year-old high school senior to the early morning hours of November 27, 2009, when he crashes SUV into a tree and effectively ended the most dominant run in the history of golf, Woods was a human woven of heart-stopping drama and entertainment.
He was someone no one had ever seen or will ever see again. At the height of Tiger's career, golf beat the NFL and the NBA in ratings. He was mobbed by fans wherever he went. Kings and presidents quoted him. Corporations wooed him. Women wanted to sleep with him. For the better part of two decades, he was simply the most famous athlete on earth. Despite his killer instinct on the course, he was an introvert off of it, more comfortable practicing and training in solitude. As far back as childhood, he spent far more time by himself.