WATCH: Tiger Woods' emotional speech after inducted into World Golf Hall of Fame
Zee News
Tiger Woods is the first player of Black and Asian heritage to win a major at the 1997 Masters when he was 21.
The greatest of his generation, Tiger Woods took his place among the best of all time when he was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame and shared a life story of a passion to play and a work ethic that made him feel like he earned it. Woods didn't touch on any of his 82 victories on the PGA Tour or his 15 majors, or the eight surgeries he endured along the way.
He spoke of his parents taking out a second mortgage that allowed him to play the junior circuit in California, choking up when he mentioned his late father who told him he would have to earn everything he wanted. "If you don't go out there and put in the work, you don't go out and put in the effort, one, you're not going to get the results, But two, and more importantly, you don't deserve it. You need to earn it. So that defined my upbringing. That defined my career." Woods said.
He was introduced by Sam, his 14-year-old daughter who said her father preaches to her and 13-year-old brother Charlie the same message he learned from his late later."Train hard, fight easy." Woods was the headliner in an induction class that included retired PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem, three-time U.S. Women's Open champion Susie Maxwell Berning and the late Marion Hollins, a visionary who became the first woman to develop prominent golf courses.
.@TigerWoods tears up as he reflects on the moment his family risked everything for him.@GolfHallofFame pic.twitter.com/bso9xge7hM
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) March 10, 2022