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Tiger Woods says a return to the top not a 'realistic expectation'

"I have so far to go," he said

Tiger Swing Video Golf A December 2020 file photo of Tiger Woods at the PNC Championship in Orlando, the last time he participated in a golf competition | AP

Tiger Woods says he expects to play golf again, just not very often, and he doesn't see himself reaching the top of the sport again. He says he can see himself picking certain tournaments to play, but not a full-time schedule.

His extensive video interview with Golf Digest, with whom he has a financial relationship, was published Monday ahead of his first press conference since his right leg was badly damaged in a Feb. 23 car crash in the Los Angeles suburbs. Woods is the tournament host of the Hero World Challenge.

The 15-time major champion raised hopes of another comeback when Woods posted a three-second video hitting a short iron with the message, Making progress.  He didn't make it sound as though a return was around the corner.

"I have so far to go," he said. "I am not even at the halfway point. I have so much more muscle development and nerve development that I have to do in my leg. At the same time, as you know, I've had five back operations. So I am having to deal with that. So as the leg gets stronger, sometimes the back may act up."  

Woods was recovering from another back procedure at the start of the year when he ran his SUV over a median and it toppled down a steep hill on a winding, sweeping road in the Los Angeles suburbs on his way to a television shoot at a golf course.

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