EddieDoyers
formerly eddiengambino
- 46,208
- 23,878
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2012
OJ wasn't enough of a lesson that you shouldn't mess with the forbidden fruit obviously. They tryna get him![]()
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OJ wasn't enough of a lesson that you shouldn't mess with the forbidden fruit obviously. They tryna get him![]()
This son was on Molly and PercocetMan doesn't look like he was just on alcohol
He's been released lol.We in the Black Delegation would like to release Tiger Woods from his contract with us.
When the molly hits you hard
Feel bad for him. Honestly spent so many years saying he wasn't black. I find it ironic on that mugshot they have him listed as black. Hanging around white folks all the time.. had him thinking he was white\thought he was accepted. Don't acknowledge the injustice with minorities, I bet he know he black now!
Uh why would the dad be blamed for Tiger's mistakes?I have been rooting for a Tiger comeback for years, I think he is a complete douche but his comeback story would be epic
I blame his father for all this if you look deeper into it
Crying at the old english. Tiger is a washed drunk. Even I a recovering alcoholic don't have a dui.
It's Official
Damn i do and I ain't even a drunk...Crying at the old english. Tiger is a washed drunk. Even I a recovering alcoholic don't have a dui.
Uh why would the dad be blamed for Tiger's mistakes?
Dude been dead since 2006.
Tiger first got exposed at 2009.
You can say that the dad was the rock in his life until the dad passed away.
http://www.golfdigest.com/story/20060512earlwoodsUh why would the dad be blamed for Tiger's mistakes?
Dude been dead since 2006.
Tiger first got exposed at 2009.
You can say that the dad was the rock in his life until the dad passed away.
have you read about how his dad really was? that shaped Tiger
Taking advantage of a fresh start with Kultida, Woods immersed himself in Tiger's life. Having just taken up golf the year before and quickly becoming proficient at it, he was eager to expose his fourth child to the game. He did that when Tiger was only a couple of months old--Tiger would sit in his high chair in the garage while Earl hit balls into a net. "I was lucky," Earl wrote in Training A Tiger. "Tiger took to the game immediately. Much like me, he had an instant infatuation with it. And I always kept him wanting more." Accentuating the positive while steeling him later with the realities of being a minority sportsman, Earl fed Tiger's hunger for golf but didn't demand it. "The saddest thing in competitive athletics," Earl told Golf Digest, "is to see an athlete competing because he or she is required to compete, not because they desire to compete." John Anselmo, one of Tiger's early golf instructors, told Newsweek in 1996, "so far as I know Earl never pushed Tiger to do anything."
"The best thing about those practices was that my father always kept it fun," Tiger wrote in an introduction to Training A Tiger. "It is amazing how much you can learn when you truly enjoy doing something. Golf for me has always been a labor of love and pleasure."
When Earl attended Tiger's tournaments during his teens, he often camped out a fairway over, sitting on his folding chair listening to jazz on a Walkman, puffing on an omnipresent Merit 100. When Tiger was 14, he called his father, "the coolest guy I know." The "Saturday Night Live" skit in which a Tiger Woods character remarked about having a golf club glued to his hands was far from the truth.
Jack Nicklaus, also 30 when his dad died, said last week: "My father was my best friend, my mentor and perhaps my greatest support system. Earl was all of that to Tiger."