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Posted July 14, 2020, 2:23 pm
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After 5-month break, Tiger Woods quietly gets back to work at Muirfield Village

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    Tiger Woods tees off on 18 during a practice round for the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, Tuesday, July 14, 2020. [Adam Cairns/ The Columbus Dispatch via USA TODAY NETWORK]

DUBLIN, Ohio – Tiger Woods knows he needs to swiftly shed some rust and rapidly find a rhythm to playing a PGA Tour event again.

He also has to quickly discover a cadence to deal with the new world of silence.

See photos from Tiger Woods' practice round at The Memorial

After a five-month break from the PGA Tour, Woods returned to work Tuesday alongside Justin Thomas for a quick – and very quiet – practice round on the back nine at sun-drenched Muirfield Village ahead of Thursday’s start of The Memorial.

It didn’t take long for Woods to see things are going to be unusual.

“It’s certainly a different world, different environment that we’re in,” Woods said. “To play practice rounds like this and to watch as the Tour has evolved and started back and to see no fans, it’s just a very different world out here.

“I’ve had cameras on me since I turned pro, so it’s been over 20-some-odd years that virtually almost every one of my shots that I’ve hit on the Tour has been documented. But this is a different world and one we’re going to have to get used to. There’s nothing to feed off of energy-wise. You make a big putt or make a big par or make a big chip or hit a hell of a shot, there’s no one there. That’s one of the more interesting things that I’ll be dealing with going forward.”

Woods last played on the PGA Tour Feb. 16 when he shot a final-round 77 and finished in last place at the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club north of Los Angeles. In his only other start on the PGA Tour this year, Woods, who is seeking his record 83rd PGA Tour title, finished in a tie for ninth in the Farmers Insurance Open in January.

He last played in competition – and played well – in The Match: Champions for Charity on May 24, where he and Peyton Manning defeated Phil Mickelson and Tom Brady on the final hole.

Woods, 44, considered playing a tournament before the Memorial but opted on the side of caution. He wanted to see how things played out when the PGA Tour returned after a 13-week hiatus due to the COVID global pandemic. Now he has to find a routine in dealing with COVID on the road.

“I feel that I’m comfortable enough to come back out here and play again, and I’m excited to do it,” said Woods, who has won The Memorial a record five times, the most recent victory coming in 2012. “The Tour has done a fantastic job of setting up the safety and trying to ensure that all of us are protected and are safe, but it is a risk that we are now undertaking when we walk on the property and are around individuals that you don’t know where they’ve been or what they’ve been doing.

“But the screening, the testing we’ve done, the protections that we’ve tried to implement on the Tour have shown that we’ve had to make adjustments, but it’s a risk that I’m willing to take.”