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Earl Woods

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Earl Dennison Woods
Official U.S. Army portrait
Born(1932-03-05)March 5, 1932
Manhattan, Kansas
DiedMay 3, 2006(2006-05-03) (aged 74)
Cypress, California
Buried
Manhattan, Kansas[1]
Allegiance United States
Service / branchUnited States Army, Infantry
Years of service1954-1974[2]
RankLieutenant Colonel
UnitGreen Berets
Military Assistance Command, Vietnam
Battles / warsVietnam War
AwardsBronze Star
Army Commendation Medal
Vietnam Gallantry Cross
RelationsTiger Woods, Cheyenne Woods

Earl Dennison Woods (March 5, 1932 – May 3, 2006) was a US Army infantry officer who served two tours of duty in Vietnam, and retired with the rank of lieutenant colonel. He was a college-level baseball player and writer, but is best remembered as the father of professional golfer Tiger Woods. Woods started his son in golf at a very early age, and coached him exclusively for his first years in the sport.

Early life

Earl Woods was born in Manhattan, Kansas. His father, Miles Woods, had five children by his first wife, Viola, and six more (of whom Earl was the youngest) by his second, Maude Carter. Miles Woods was an epileptic who worked as a street cleaner and caretaker. Although he was a devout Baptist, he also had a reputation for being able to swear for 30 minutes without interruption. Earl Woods once remarked, "I picked up on that". Earl Woods' mother, Maude (Carter) Woods was of mixed African and European ancestry. Woods' siblings ranged from fairly dark to very light; he remembered that his grandmother Carter, a Mulatto, was "the prettiest blonde you ever saw." There was a family joke about an alleged Chinese ancestor who "didn't stay on his railroad job," but there is no record of any Chinese ancestry. However, the family is said to have some Native American ancestry.[3]

Miles Woods loved baseball and passed his passion on to his son. Maude Woods, who was college educated, was determined her children should make the best of themselves. When her husband died in 1943, however, she had to go to work as a maid. Earl Woods recalled that it "broke her heart". Woods' mother died when he was 15, and he was raised from then on by his older sister Hattie Bell Woods.

College, sports, segregation

Earl Woods attended Kansas State University (then known as Kansas State College), and played baseball, earning a varsity letter in both 1952 and 1953. His teammate Larry Hartshorn recalled how Woods once was not allowed to play at a college in Mississippi because of his race. The entire Kansas State University team refused to play and left in protest.[1]

Woods broke the Big Eight Conference (then the Big Seven Conference) "color barrier" in baseball in 1951.[4] He usually played as a catcher, and was offered a contract by the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues. However, he decided to continue his education. He graduated in 1953 with a (B.S. in Sociology),[5] and began his career as a commissioned officer in the U.S. Army.[1]

Military career

Woods served two combat tours during the Vietnam War, the first as an infantry officer, and the second with the elite United States Army Special Forces.[2]

After graduating from the Defense Information School and being promoted to lieutenant colonel, he was assigned as an instructor of Military Science & Tactics, (Army ROTC) at the City College of New York. He retired from active duty in 1974.[4]

Woods moved to southern California, and became an agent for corporations involved in defense industry contracting.

Personal life

Woods married Barbara Gary on May 18, 1954, in Abilene, Kansas.[5] They had three children: Earl Dennison Jr. (1955), Kevin Dale (1957), and Royce Renee (1961).[6] Earl Jr.'s daughter Cheyenne Woods is also a competitive golfer and received some coaching from Earl Sr.

Woods and his wife divorced in 1968 in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico.[7]

Woods had met his second wife while stationed in Thailand in 1966.[8] She is Kultida Punswad, who is half Thai and half Chinese. They married in 1969 in Brooklyn, New York. Their son Eldrick was born in 1975. His son's nickname, "Tiger," comes from Earl Woods' wartime friendship with Colonel Vuong Dang "Tiger" Phong, a courageous pilot who flew the Vietnamese Army.

The view of the Dyker Beach Golf Course, in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn.

Coaches son in golf

In 1972, Woods was stationed at Brooklyn’s Fort Hamilton, and learned to play golf, starting at age 42,[9] at the Dyker Beach Golf Course in Dyker Heights.[10][11][12] From his first experience with golf, Earl Woods was captivated by it, and played a great deal for the remainder of his life. He eventually became a good standard amateur golfer, often scoring in the 70s for 18 holes. Earl claimed to be playing close to scratch handicap level when Tiger was born in late 1975.[13] Coached by his father, Tiger Woods was introduced to golf in Orange County, California before age two, and became a child prodigy in golf, perhaps the most precocious young golfer in history. Tiger learned golf first on the U.S. military courses in southern California.[4]

Author

Earl Woods shared the techniques he used in coaching his son Tiger in two books: Training a Tiger: A Father's Guide to Raising a Winner in Both Golf and Life, and Playing Through: Straight Talk on Hard Work, Big Dreams and Adventures with Tiger. Woods coached Tiger exclusively until age five, then sought professional assistance from Rudy Duran and John Anselmo, both well-regarded PGA club professionals in the area.[14] Earl Woods has been criticized by some for putting too much pressure on Tiger. In 1993, following Tiger's third straight title in the USGA Junior Amateur Championship, Earl Woods sought out superstar teacher Butch Harmon to develop Tiger's game to the next level.[15] Harmon, upon meeting Tiger Woods for the first time in Houston in summer 1993, praised the coaching which Earl Woods, Duran, and Anselmo had done to that stage.[16]

Guides Tiger's career

Tiger and Earl Woods during a 2004 press conference at Fort Bragg

Earl Woods retired from his second career in 1988. He traveled to Tiger's events as often as possible for the rest of his life. Earl Woods hired Connecticut attorney John Merchant in 1996 to help facilitate the path for Tiger to turn professional, and to secure lucrative sponsorship agreements when he did so. Merchant had been the first African American member of the United States Golf Association's Executive Committee. Tiger signed deals with Nike, Titleist, and the International Management Group, which made him a multi-millionaire as soon as he declared professional status, in late August 1996. Tiger's deals broke by a wide margin all records for sponsorship money in golf. Soon after Tiger turned professional, Merchant was fired by Earl Woods.[17]

Death

Earl Woods was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1998. He survived it, but died from a heart attack at his home in Cypress, California in 2006 at the age of 74. He was buried at Sunset Cemetery in Manhattan, Kansas

Memorials

The Earl Woods National Youth Golf Academy at Colbert Hills Golf Course in Manhattan, Kansas is named in his honor. It was host to the first First Tee National Academy in 2000.

Nike commercial

On April 8, 2010, Nike released a television commercial, created by the Wieden + Kennedy ad agency, featuring the somber face of Tiger Woods (depicted in black and white) and the voice of Earl Woods. The audio track of the commercial was taken from a 2004 interview of Earl for the documentary DVD Tiger: The Authorized DVD Collection,[18] in which Earl discussed comparing the "authoritative" nature of his wife, Kultida, to his own "inquisitive" nature. The commercial utilized a sound bite from that interview as a backdrop to the camera capture of Tiger's face, and it was widely interpreted as a skewing of Earl's words to posthumously address Tiger's own marital issues which had recently come to light; the commercial was released on the same day that Tiger had made his anticipated return to competition at the Masters Tournament following a five-month self-imposed absence during the resulting public fallout, and it was the first commercial to feature Tiger's participation since the scandal first breached public scrutiny.

Reactions to the commercial varied widely,[19] with criticisms being particularly leveled at Nike for utilizing Tiger's own domestic issues for commercial gain and plaudits being forwarded to Tiger for addressing how the scandal had affected him both in private and public life.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Tramel, Jimmie (August 3, 2007). "Tulsa World: Tiger was raised by a Wildcat". Tulsa World. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  2. ^ a b Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2009. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Michigan: Gale, 2009. http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC. Fee via Fairfax County Public Library, accessed 2009-07-06. Document Number: H1000125003.
  3. ^ Earl Wood's Obituary, Telegraph.Co.Uk, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1517444/Earl-Woods.html
  4. ^ a b c Training a Tiger, by Earl Woods and Pete McDaniel, 1997.
  5. ^ a b Sounes, p. 35
  6. ^ Sounes, p. 114
  7. ^ Sounes, Howard (2004). The wicked game: Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, and the story of modern golf (illustrated ed.). HarperCollins. pp. 116 et seq. ISBN 9780060513863. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  8. ^ The Wicked Game: Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, and the Story of Modern Golf, by Howard Sounes, 2004, William Morrow, New York, ISBN 0-06-051386-1, pp. 115.
  9. ^ Training a Tiger, by Earl Woods and Pete McDaniel, 1997
  10. ^ “Golf and the City - The City Game After years of neglect and despite numerous obstacles, public golf courses in New York City are alive and well" The Met Golfer August/September 2007 By Raphael Tennenbaum
  11. ^ Fore free! Dyker junior links open The Brooklyn Paper, By Jessica Firger, June 14, 2008
  12. ^ Dyker Beach Park – A Golf Course Just For Kids NYC Parks Department
  13. ^ Training a Tiger, by Earl Woods and Pete McDaniel, 1997, p. xvii.
  14. ^ Training a Tiger, by Earl Woods and Pete McDaniel, 1997; The Wicked Game, by Howard Sounes, 2004
  15. ^ Training a Tiger, by Earl Woods and Pete McDaniel, 1997; Pro, by Butch Harmon, 2006; The Wicked Game, by Howard Sounes, 2004.
  16. ^ Pro, by Butch Harmon, 2006.
  17. ^ The Wicked Game: Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, and the Story of Modern Golf, by Howard Sounes, 2004, William Morrow, New York, ISBN 0-06-051386-1, pp. 175-195.
  18. ^ Tiger Woods Ad Ripped Audio from 2004 Documentary, by Russell Goldman, April 8, 2010, ABC News
  19. ^ Mixed reaction to Nike ad with Tiger Woods, his dad's voice, By Lonnae O'Neal Parker, Thursday, April 8, 2010; 2:01 PM; Washington Post

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