Tiger Woods latest commercial for Gatorade Tiger Focus aired this morning on MTV and ESPN.

With the Masters going on this week – thought this was highly relevant. Here’s some background on the commercial which is really interesting.

Gatorade and Tiger Woods have launched the reformulated Gatorade Tiger Focus which provides advanced hydration to help promote mental focus, as inspired by Tiger Woods’ legendary mental toughness. To support the launch the brand has developed “Woods of Wisdom,” an ad campaign created in collaboration with Woods with an animated style that commands attention and portrays key moments that influenced Woods and his ability to focus and excel.


Feb 182009
 

Tiger Woods shows off his adorable 10-day-old son, Charlie Axel Woods, in the new issue of Golf magazine.

The golfer and wife Elin Nordegren welcomed their first son on Feb. 8.

“Both Charlie and Elin are doing great, and we want to thank everyone for their sincere best wishes and kind thoughts,” Woods blogged on his Web site the day Charlie was born.

The Golf magazine photos shows Woods, Nordegren and their daughter, Sam Alexis, 20 months, cradling the newborn.

“Sam is very excited to be a big sister and we feel truly blessed to have such a wonderful family,” Woods blogged.

Woods has been a stay-at-home dad since injuring his knee in June 2008, but will soon return to the PGA tour, Golf reports.

(source)

 

In this photos provided by Gillette, while shooting a commercial in Orlando, Fla., Tiger Woods, left, and Derek Jeter hone their skills in preparation for the “Gillette-EA SPORTS Champions of Gaming Tournament powered by Xbox LIVE” which gets underway on Friday, October 31, 2008.

For more information, visit www.gillette.com/easports.

 

Golf Channel suspended anchor Kelly Tilghman for two weeks on Wednesday for saying last week that young players who wanted to challenge Tiger Woods should “lynch him in a back alley.”

Tilghman was laughing during the exchange Friday with analyst Nick Faldo at the Mercedes-Benz Championship, and Woods’ agent at IMG said he didn’t think there was any ill intent.

But the comments became prevalent on news shows Wednesday, and the Rev. Al Sharpton joined the fray by demanding she be fired immediately. Golf Channel didn’t know who would replace Tilghman in the booth this week at the Sony Open or next week at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.

“There is simply no place on our network for offensive language like this,” Golf Channel said in a statement.

Tilghman became golf’s first female anchor last year when the PGA Tour signed a 15-year deal in which Golf Channel broadcasts the first three events of the year, weekday coverage of all tour events, and full coverage of the Fall Series and opposite-field events.

The suspension ends in time for the Buick Invitational on Jan. 24, when Woods will make his 2008 debut.

Faldo and Tilghman were discussing young players who could challenge the world’s No. 1 player toward the end of Friday’s broadcast at Kapalua when Faldo suggested that “to take Tiger on, maybe they should just gang up for a while.”

“Lynch him in a back alley,” Tilghman replied.

“While we believe that Kelly’s choice of words was inadvertent and that she did not intend them in an offensive manner, the words were hurtful and grossly inappropriate,” Golf Channel said in its statement. “Consequently, we have decided to suspend Kelly for two weeks, effective immediately.”

Woods and Tilghman have known each other 12 years. She was picked to host a club demonstration with Woods in south Florida when he talked about new products from Nike Golf.

Tilghman was helped when Mark Steinberg, Woods’ agent at IMG, said it was a non-issue and considered the matter “case closed.”

“Tiger and Kelly are friends, and Tiger has a great deal of respect for Kelly,” Steinberg said Tuesday night in a statement released by Golf Channel. “Regardless of the choice of words used, we know unequivocally that there was no ill-intent in her comments.”

Tilghman had said in a previous statement she apologized directly to Woods, and the immediate support from Woods’ camp was critical.

After Woods won the 1997 Masters at age 21 to become its youngest champion, Fuzzy Zoeller referred to him as “that little boy,” and suggested that Woods not serve fried chicken or collard greens, “or whatever the hell they serve,” at the Champions Dinner.

Woods, who had a different management team in his first full season, did not respond for three days to Zoeller’s apology, and it took Zoeller years to recover from the fallout.

Tilghman’s comment made the rounds Wednesday on TV shows such as CNN’s Headline News, and it was prominently discussed on blogs and message boards on the Internet. It also was a topic on the practice range at the Sony Open.

“I’m sure Kelly wishes she never said that,” Jim Furyk said. “I haven’t spoken with Tiger, but I’ve been told that they’ve had their talk and they’ve discussed it. Anything I say is kind of just like pouring salt in the wound at this point. Obviously, she would love to not have said that and for it not to be news. I’m glad that her and Tiger spoke.”

Fred Funk only heard about the comment Wednesday morning.

“There was no ill intent at all,” he said. “I think it was just a slip, and they said that Tiger has already forgiven her. I think when you’re in the TV tower for that many hours, you’re going to wish you didn’t say some things probably, and that was one thing that slipped out. I think you’ve got to give them a little grace.

“Her integrity, how Kelly is respected out here, is pretty good. I think Tiger really likes Kelly, so that helped squash it. Because Tiger could have run off with that if he took it the wrong way. But he didn’t, so that was good.”

Before her suspension was announced, Sharpton spoke earlier on CNN’s “Prime News” and continued to push for her firing, saying he wanted to meet with Golf Channel because the comments were “an insult to all blacks.”

“Lynching is not murder in general, it’s not assault in general,” Sharpton said. “It’s a specific racial term that this women should be held accountable for. What she said is racist. Whether she’s a racist … is immaterial. She’s a broadcaster. The channel has to be accountable to the public.”

 

An Irish magazine apologized to Tiger Woods’s wife Elin Nordegren Woods on Friday and agreed to pay the former model “substantial” damages after it published fake nude pictures during the 2006 Ryder Cup at the K Club.

“The false and deeply offensive article in The Dubliner magazine, with the accompanying photograph of another woman wrongly claimed to be me, caused great personal distress to me and my family,” Nordegren Woods said in a statement.

She did not disclose the scale of damages received in settlement of a libel action brought in November 2006 but a source who was in the court room said the magazine had agreed to pay 125,000 euros ($182,000) over two years.

If The Dubliner defaults on payment it will become liable for a further 125,000 euros plus costs, the source said.

Nordegren Woods said the money would be donated to cancer support charities in memory of Heather Clarke, the late wife of British golfer Darren Clarke.

The statement from Nordegren said Trevor White, publisher of The Dubliner, had apologized unreservedly for the article.

“The story was cheap, tasteless and deliberately offensive,” it quoted White as saying in the magazine’s apology.

White described the article, entitled “Ryder Cup Filth For Dublin?,” as utterly and comprehensively false, profoundly hurtful and shameful.

“The article was accompanied by a nude photograph of a woman falsely identified as being Elin Woods and the article falsely stated other such photographs were to be found on Internet porn sites,” he said.

“There are no such photographs of Ms. Nordegren Woods on Internet sites or elsewhere. Ms. Nordegren Woods has never posed, or been photographed, nude.”

The magazine also apologized for its initial defense that the article was intended as a satirical parody, saying instead that it was a “cheap, vulgar lie which was unforgivably insulting to Ms. Nordegren Woods.”

 

John Mayer, Teri Hatcher and Tiger Woods



 




Dec 302006
 

Tiger Woods and his wife, Elin Nordegren, are expecting their first child together, the golf superstar announced on his Web site Saturday.

“As some of you know, today is my 31st birthday. I’ll spend it quietly with family and friends, but Elin and I have more exciting news to share: We are expecting our first child together this summer,” Woods wrote on his site.

“Obviously, we couldn’t be happier and our families are thrilled,” said Woods. “I have always wanted to be a dad. I just wish my father could be around to share the experience.”

Woods’s dad, Earl Woods, passed away in May at age 74 after battling cancer. The father and son had a famously close relationship. “My dad was my best friend and greatest role model,” Woods said at the time. “He was an amazing dad, coach, mentor, soldier, husband and friend.”

As for his career, Woods says he plans to “stick close to home” for the next few weeks to spend more time with his expectant wife. He plans to start his 2007 PGA Tour season at the Buick Invitational in late January.

Woods told PEOPLE last year that he was looking forward to starting a family with Nordegren, whom he married in October 2005.

“We’re definitely going to have kids soon. We certainly want to do it, because obviously I’m not getting any younger,” he said. “I’d like to have a boy first, then a girl. I like the idea of a big brother taking care of his little sister. I want them to be close in age, too. I want my kids to grow up close.”

(via People)

 

Tiger Woods got ambushed by an evangelical guest of Nike on Oct. 9 during an exclusive golf outing for top business and entertainment executives. According to our spy, 30 people – including Clear Channel Radio CEO Mark Mays, Louis Vuitton North America chief Daniel LaLonde and Details magazine editor Daniel Peres – gathered at the Trump golf course in Los Angeles for the 2006 “Tee It Up With Tiger Woods” event, which included a private golf session and lunch with the living legend. “During the lunch, there was a Q&A session with Woods, and most people were asking about their swings or golf questions,” our source said. “Until some guy – a guest of Nike – stood up and said, ‘Have you accepted Jesus as your Lord and Savior? And if not, prayfully, would you?’ ” The source added, “You could have heard a pin drop. People were mortified. But Tiger was as unflappable as he is on the golf course and responded, ‘My father was a Christian – of course Christianity was part of my life – but my mother is Asian and Buddhism was also part of my childhood, so I practice both faiths respectfully.’ ”

(via Page Six)



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