Thousand Oaks (AP) — Tiger Woods disclosed his "personal
failings" in a 317-word statement on his Web site that did not delve
into details, except to say that he "let my family down" and regrets it
"with all of my heart."
Still to be determined is whether this closes a shocking saga involving one of the biggest names in sport.
In
the last week, Woods has faced intense media scrutiny after a car
accident outside his home in the middle of the night and sordid
allegations of affairs. Finally, on Wednesday, Woods acknowledged he
had "not been true to my values and the behavior my family deserves."
The
statement followed an Us Weekly cover story of a Los Angeles waitress
claiming she had a 31-month affair with the world's No. 1 golfer.
Woods' words were posted three hours after the magazine released a
voice mail — provided by the waitress, Jaimee Grubbs — that Woods left
on her phone three days before he rammed his Cadillac Escalade into a
fire hydrant and tree outside his Florida home.
"I have let my
family down and I regret those transgressions with all of my heart,"
Woods said on his Web site. "I will strive to be a better person and
the husband and father that my family deserves."
He did not
mention the allegations of an affair, only that he would deal with "my
behavior and personal failings" alone with his family.
Along with
a public apology, the man who has pursued privacy as relentlessly as he
has chased major championships made another plea for privacy.
"Personal
sins should not require press releases and problems within a family
shouldn't have to mean public confessions," he said.
The
investigation into Woods' accident ended Tuesday when the Florida
Highway Patrol issued a $164 citation for careless driving. The
inspection of his personal life is seemingly just beginning.
Woods'
career — as a golfer, a pitchman and perhaps the most recognized
athlete in the world — has been largely without blemish since he turned
pro at age 20.
Three of his sponsors — Nike, Gatorade and EA
Sports — expressed support or commitment to Woods. Gillette said it had
no plans to change its marketing programs. AT&T declined comment.
In
the most critical comment from a player, Jesper Parnevik said he owed
an apology to Woods' wife, Elin, a former Swedish model who once worked
as a nanny for the Parnevik family.
"We probably thought he was a
better guy than he is," Parnevik told the Golf Channel from West Palm
Beach, Fla., where he is in the final stage of PGA Tour qualifying.
Windermere
police said Woods' wife told them she smashed out the back windows of
his SUV with a golf club to help get him out after he struck a fire
hydrant and tree.
"I would probably need to apologize to her and
hope she uses a driver next time instead of a 3-iron," Parnevik said,
adding that he has not spoken to Woods since the accident.
"It's
a private thing, of course," the Swede said. "But when you are the guy
he is — the world's best athlete — you should think more before you do
stuff ... and maybe not 'just do it,' like Nike says."
But other professional athletes had sympathy for Woods.
Jason
Taylor walked into the Miami Dolphins' locker room and saw ESPN running
a tease about Woods. He reached up and turned off the TV. "Nobody's
damned business," Taylor said.
Minnesota Vikings kicker Ryan
Longwell lives in the same Isleworth gated community as Woods outside
Orlando, Fla., and said it was "crazy" in the neighborhood. He said his
wife told him paparazzi were everywhere and helicopters hovered
overhead.
"My wife is a blonde and wears sunglasses in Florida,
so every time she comes out of the gate, they're snapping pictures,"
Longwell said. "It's a different thing than we've ever faced down
there. It's certainly a new wrinkle to it.
"You just pray for his
family," Longwell said. "You pray for his wife and kids. Just pray that
if what's coming out is true that he can learn from it and move on."
Most
players at the Chevron World Challenge — hosted by Woods, who withdrew
earlier this week — offered him support, even as they were curious how
he crashed his car in the wee hours of Friday morning.
"He's
trying to make it as private as he can, and it's just hard, because
everybody is trying to get a piece of information on really what
happened," said Steve Stricker, who regularly exchanges text messages
with Woods, but hasn't heard from him since the accident.
"I
think his image is going to take a bit of a shot," Stricker said. "I
think I'd like to see him come on TV and just pour it out a little bit
and show what's happened. I don't know if that will ever happen."
In
its final report released Wednesday, the Florida Highway Patrol said
Woods caused $3,200 in property damage, was not wearing a seat belt and
was traveling 30 mph in a 25 mph zone.
The six-page report —
which did not include statements from Woods, his wife or any witnesses
— said Woods' SUV rubbed up against bushes, crossed over a curb, onto a
grass median and into a row of hedges before striking the fire hydrant
and a tree. Damage to his Cadillac Escalade was estimated at $8,000.
Far more damaging to his image was the Us Weekly cover story.
Grubbs
told the magazine she met Woods at a Las Vegas nightclub the week after
the 2007 Masters — two months before Woods' wife gave birth to their
first child.
In the voice mail released by the magazine, a man says to Grubbs:
"Hey,
it's, uh, it's Tiger. I need you to do me a huge favor. Um, can you
please, uh, take your name off your phone. My wife went through my
phone. And, uh, may be calling you. If you can, please take your name
off that and, um, and what do you call it just have it as a number on
the voice mail, just have it as your telephone number. That's it, OK.
You gotta do this for me. Huge. Quickly. All right. Bye."
The Associated Press could not confirm Woods was the caller.
Woods'
limited response after the crash — the first statement Friday spoke of
a "minor accident" — fueled speculation about a domestic dispute.
"The
stories in particular that physical violence played any role in the car
accident were utterly false and malicious," Woods said. "Elin has
always done more to support our family and shown more grace than anyone
could possibly expect."
Such sordid revelations come at a crucial
time for the PGA Tour, which is talking to a dozen companies about
tournament sponsorship deals that expire after 2010. The tour also is
to begin negotiations next year for a new TV contract.
Neal Pilson, former CBS Sports president who runs his own consulting business, did not think it would affect the next deal.
"We're
seeing this in the glare of the day, these incredible revelations,"
Pilson said. "At some point, he'll play golf and he'll move on. At some
point, this will become more embarrassing to the media than Tiger."
TV
ratings typically double when Woods is contention, and he has begun his
season every year since 2006 at Torrey Pines in San Diego, which starts
Jan. 28.
"Ratings will be good for golf. Aren't you going to be
watching?" Pilson said. "The ratings for Tiger are going to be higher
than they might be ordinarily. I don't think there will be any negative
fallout for golf. This is a Tiger Woods story. He happens to be a
golfer, but he's a worldwide personality."