TIMELINE-Tiger Woods' professional golfing career

Two months later, he was ranked number one in the world for the first time in his career. 2000 - Completed a career grand slam by the age of 24 with wins at the U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship, making him the youngest player ever to win all four major golf titles and just the second to win three majors in a year.


Reuters | Updated: 24-02-2021 02:50 IST | Created: 24-02-2021 02:50 IST
TIMELINE-Tiger Woods' professional golfing career

The following timeline charts the professional career of American golfer Tiger Woods: 1997 - Woods, 21, won the first of 15 career major titles with a 12-stroke victory over Tom Kite at the Masters, making him both the youngest golfer and the first Black professional golfer to triumph at Augusta National. Two months later, he was ranked number one in the world for the first time in his career.

2000 - Completed a career grand slam by the age of 24 with wins at the U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship, making him the youngest player ever to win all four major golf titles and just the second to win three majors in a year. 2001 - Won the second of his four Masters titles, to become the first person to hold all four of professional golf's major championships simultaneously - the so-called 'Tiger Slam'.

2008 - Won his 14th major at the U.S. Open by beating Rocco Mediate on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff at Torrey Pines following an 18-hole playoff, despite playing with damaged knee cartilage and two stress fractures of the leg. 2009 - Weeks after being involved in a bizarre car accident outside his home that ballooned into a sex scandal, Woods said in December that he was taking an indefinite break from professional golf after admitting he cheated on his wife.

2010 - Made his return to professional golf with a fourth-place finish at the Masters in April. In October, after a run of 281 weeks, Woods was unseated from the world number one ranking by Lee Westwood, ending the record for most consecutive weeks in that position. 2013 - In March, retook world number one spot from Rory Mcllroy.

2014 - A week before the Masters in April, Woods announced that he required back surgery, forcing him to withdraw from that year's opening major for the first time since 1994. He returned to competition in July but the following month again injured his back. 2014 - After 60 consecutive weeks, Woods was dislodged from the world number one ranking in May, marking the last time he occupied the top spot.

2015 - After seemingly being injury-free for most of the year, Woods had a second microdiscectomy performed in September with a follow-up procedure six weeks later, forcing him to shut down his playing schedule indefinitely. 2016 - Woods played his first competitive event in nearly 16 months and finished 15th in a 17-player field at the Hero World Challenge.

2017 - Missed the cut in his first event of the year and then pulled out of a European Tour event after an opening-round 77 due to back spasms. In April he had the fourth back surgery of his career and in May was arrested on a charge of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs. He blamed the incident on a reaction to prescribed medication. 2019 - In April, Woods completed one of sport's great comeback stories, ending an 11-year majors drought by winning the Masters for a fifth time and bringing his majors total to 15 - just three short of record holder Jack Nicklaus with 18. In October, Woods won the Zozo Championship in Chiba, Japan to match Sam Snead's record of 82 PGA Tour victories.

2020 - Woods and son Charlie teamed up to play at the PNC Championship, a joint PGA/LPGA Tour family tournament. (Writing by Steve Keating and Frank Pingue; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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