It’s been almost three decades since Tiger Woods[1] announced himself on the global stage with a simple, ‘Hello, world.’ The brief statement marked the beginning of one of golf’s most illustrious careers. But this week the golf world was left asking if Woods would ever greet it again.
The prospect of Woods, 49, returning to competitive golf grew ever bleaker at the weekend when he announced that he had been forced to undergo yet another back operation[2] to replace a collapsed disc in his spine.
It wasn’t surprising. After five health setbacks in four years, it could no longer truly come as a shock. Yet, Woods’ latest back surgery still came as a devastating blow.
For years, the writing has appeared to be on the wall. After every procedure, the world has questioned whether Woods, who hasn’t teed it up at Tour level since July 2024, has another comeback left in him.[3]
Yet, time and time again, the Big Cat roared back and proved his doubters wrong. And a close friend of the golfing legend revealed that while Woods acknowledges that his career is coming to a close, he is eyeing one more comeback to bow out on his own terms.
‘He’s not stupid. He knows things are winding down, and he’s coming to terms with it,’ the insider admitted to The Daily Mail. ‘He’s turning 50 this year.

Tiger Woods sparked fears once again on Saturday when he announced another back surgery

A source told The Daily Mail that the 49-year-old golfer, pictured with girlfriend Vanessa Trump, is still eyeing a comeback in order to end his career on this own terms

Woods is pictured with daughter Sam, 18, and son Charlie, 16 at the 2024 PNC Championship
‘He won’t retire but he’s slowing down. He wants to do at least one more major and to perform well in it. He wants to end the career with a bang, not a whimper. But right now, we’ll have to see.’
The source close to Woods stressed that the golfer’s main focus at present is his recovery – and that will determine his future.
‘He’s not in denial, but he wants to push himself until there’s nothing more he can do. It depends on his recovery if he’s there yet or not. Seems pretty likely that he is,’ they added.
But Dr. Kern Singh,[4] an expert in minimally invasive spinal surgery, clarified that it’s not a question of whether Woods can muster any form of sustained comeback but whether he should.
‘Physiologically, yes, a return to professional competition is possible if healing proceeds uneventfully,’ Dr. Singh, a co-director of the Minimally Invasive Spinal Institute at Rush in Illinois, told The Daily Mail.
‘Disc replacement aims to restore normal segmental motion and reduce the stress on adjacent levels – critical for an athlete reliant on rotational power. However, given his extensive surgical history, age, and the cumulative toll on his spine, the risk-benefit balance becomes more nuanced.
‘While he can return, whether he should depends on his tolerance for risk, long-term spinal health priorities, and quality-of-life considerations beyond golf. The more surgeries one accumulates, the narrower the margin for error becomes.’
Dr. Singh, who serves as a team physician for the NBA’s Chicago Bulls and the MLB’s Chicago White Sox, was quick to highlight that Woods previously underwent an L5-S1 Fusion – a procedure to permanently join two vertebrae – in 2017 and returned to win The Masters for a fifth time two years later.

Dr. Kern Singh, an expert in minimally invasive spinal surgery, spoke to The Daily Mail

The 15-time major winner underwent a spinal fusion in 2017 before returning to golf

Two years after the fusion, Woods captured his fifth Masters victory at Augusta National
‘I believe the major limitation for Tiger will be his leg and not his back,’ he added, referring to the traumatic injuries to Woods’ right leg and their lingering impact from the icon’s 2021 car crash.
Woods’ latest back surgery, the seventh of his career, was a lumbar disc replacement, which is a motion-preserving procedure.
The 82-time PGA Tour winner revealed that scans had shown a collapsed disk in his lower vertebrae, disk fragments and a compromised spinal canal, and that pain and a lack of mobility had necessitated the surgery.
Dr. Singh explained most patients typically begin gradual recovery from such a surgery within four to six weeks.
But he warned that for an elite athlete such as Woods to return to peak competitive form the process could take at least six months and even up to a year.
He indicated that Woods would have to follow a highly-structured rehabilitation, focusing first on pain control and mobility, then progressive core strengthening, rotational stability, and eventual golf-specific mechanics.
The surgeon estimated that Woods wouldn’t be able to return to golf-specific motions, such as the rotation needed in the back swing, until at least three months into his recovery. Even then, it could ne an additional three months before fans see him close to swinging shape
The adoring masses have seen glimpses of Woods in recent months, albeit as a spectator rather than a competitor.

Dr. Singh estimated Woods wouldn’t be able to return to competition for at least six months

The golfer completed ‘an out of state private intensive program’ after his DUI arrest in 2017

Woods is pictured getting creamed rubbed onto his back by former caddie Steve Williams during the American Express Championship in Ireland in 2004

The golf icon sustained horrific injuries from a single-vehicle car crash in 2021
Amid his romance with Vanessa Trump, the ex-wife of Donald Trump Jr., Woods has been spotted supporting his son Charlie, 16, at various junior tournaments, including the US Junior Amateur Championship this summer.
But away from his TGL league, Woods has not played at Tour-level since The Open Championship in July 2024, with a prior back surgery accounting for much of his lay-off before he withdrew from the Genesis Invitational in February following the death of his mother.
His latest procedure marks his third major surgery in two years, having undergone the Achilles operation earlier this year, a microdecompression procedure in 2024 and an ankle surgery in 2023.
Woods, an 82-time winner on the PGA Tour, suffered extensive injuries from a horror, single-vehicle car crash in 2021 that broke his right leg and ankle and required emergency surgery.
He also miraculously won the 2008 US Open on a stress fracture in his left and a torn ACL. He underwent reconstructive surgery on his left knee to repair the ACL tear in June that year.
But Dr. Singh determined that it was the toll of Woods’ six previously back surgeries that could have compounded his need for the seventh.
He explained that the prior procedures likely changed the mechanics of his spine. The stress from prior fusions coupled with the repetitive impact from his golf swing could have accelerated the degeneration in his lower vertebrae and subsequently the collapsed disc.
‘The disc replacement at L4-5 was likely a downstream consequence of his earlier interventions and the mechanical demands of his sport,’ he said.

The 82-time winner on the PGA Tour receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, DC, back in 2019

Woods is seen gingerly bending down to retrieve his ball from the hole during a 2013 event

Despite not playing, Woods has been seen at his son Charlie’s tournaments in recent months
The previous procedures are also likely to affect his recovery this time around. Each successive spinal surgery increases the likelihood of scar tissue formation, reduced tissue compliance, and altered spinal biomechanics, which in turn lengthen the recovery process.
Yet, there is some hope on the horizon. Amid his analysis, Dr. Singh offered a reassuring verdict. If all goes according to plan, it should buy Woods at least enough to muster that last final ‘bang.’
‘In theory, it should provide better functional outcomes and longevity – if the surrounding segments remain healthy and the implant integrates well,’ he said.
‘However, given Woods’ history, the spine’s overall ‘reserve capacity’ is limited, so while this may buy him additional years of function, it’s not a guarantee of complete or indefinite symptom resolution.’
Last week, fans were offered a momentary glimmer of hope. The TGL indoor league, founded by Woods and Rory McIlroy, dangled a potential New Year comeback for Woods when it dropped the schedule for its forthcoming second season.
Five days later, they were left breathing another sigh of despair.
Woods described the choice to go under the knife once again as a ‘good decision for my health.’ For fans, it sparked fears that his career on the course could have finally met its end.
But it appears that if the Big Cat is saying goodbye, he’s doing it with a roar.
References
- ^ Tiger Woods (www.dailymail.co.uk)
- ^ forced to undergo yet another back operation (www.dailymail.co.uk)
- ^ another comeback left in him. (www.dailymail.co.uk)
- ^ Dr. Kern Singh, (www.outpatient-spine-surgeon.com)