Tiger Woods understands struggle, and he knows golf better than most. He has plenty of experience with both. He has authored his own comeback.
On Sunday, Woods saw another one that spoke to him, both as a golfer and a human.
There was Anthony Kim on Sunday, pouring in putt after putt to chase down Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau to win LIV Golf Adelaide and hoist his first trophy in 16 years.
Kim’s comeback is one of the most unlikely tales, and it’s one that has resonated deeply in the golf and larger sports landscape. A prodigious talent who set the golf world on fire in the late aughts, Kim was a superstar set to blossom. He won three times before the age of 25, was a Ryder Cup star at Valhalla and ascended to No. 6 in the world before an Achilles injury in 2012 saw him disappear from the professional golf world. Kim has said he dealt with multiple injuries and battled “dark demons” and addiction during his time away from the sport. He rarely thought about returning and only started playing golf again when his wife, Emily, showed interest in learning.
For more than a decade, Kim was a mythical figure. His return was speculated on and hoped for, but he was never seen or heard from outside of the occasional unsubstantiated whispers that someone saw or heard he was working on his game. Kim only returned to the professional ranks in 2024 when he signed with LIV.
Kim, now 40, has said that it is a small miracle that he is still alive and he credited Emily and daughter Isabella with turning his life around. When he joined LIV, the game that once wowed everyone was a long way away. He talked about not knowing what modern golf technology was or how to use it. He looked like a man relearning the craft that once seemingly made him hover off the ground. There was little reason to believe he’d return to the winner’s circle. He struggled in his first two seasons on LIV and found himself relegated at the end of last season. But Kim has been adamant that he has been working hard behind the scenes. This is something he wanted. He earned his spot back via the LIV Promotions Event, which included making a birdie on the 36th hole to punch his ticket to the weekend, where he eventually finished third.
Two months later, the unlikely became reality.
On Sunday, at The Grange in Southern Australia, Kim’s 14-year journey — his trauma, his battle with his personal demons, his deferred dreams, his drive to climb back — all came flooding out as he ran away from two of the best players in the world.
“I will say that that was all the lows that I went through in my life that I got to dig out of,” Kim said. “Every putt that went in, I felt the struggle, and I was overcoming it. It was therapeutic out there to fight through it and come out on top.”
Woods saw the kid who set professional golf on fire. The one he battled at Congressional. The one who beat Sergio Garcia in Ryder Cup singles and made 11 birdies in a single round at the Masters. But he is also the man that time and trauma have changed. There can be room for both.
Anthony Kim is no longer the brash, swaggering youngster. Time and struggle have changed him. But that Anthony Kim came back as he rolled in nearly every putt he looked at while outdueling Rahm and DeChambeau. Woods saw that Anthony Kim, but he also saw a man whose story has a universal lesson that should be celebrated.
“This kid hit it so good,” Woods said on Tuesday ahead of the Genesis Invitational. “He was on an unbelievable run when he won at Charlotte, and we played each other — against each other at Congressional. He played unbelievable at the 2008 Ryder Cup. He had so much natural talent. He could hit any shot he wanted.
“Then to see him struggle in life and didn’t really want to play golf, didn’t really want to be part of golf, and for him to come all the way back and for him to win and to be as devoted as he is to his family, it’s a story in which — you just have to wrap your heart around it because of the struggles. We can all relate to struggles. We all struggle in life. The longer it goes, the more tough times you’ve had. But for him to fight through it and for Anthony to get to where he’s gotten to, from the low that he was in, is something that, as I said, you have to just wrap your heart around it.”























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