Torrey Pines a good gauge for Tiger

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SAN DIEGO — Based on his record alone, there could be cause for alarm the way Tiger Woods started his season.

SAN DIEGO — Based on his record alone, there could be cause for alarm the way Tiger Woods started his season.

Woods never finished out of the top 10 in his season opener until his 13th season, when he was coming off reconstructive surgery on his left knee and was eliminated in the second round of the Match Play Championship.

He was eliminated on the second day of the Abu Dhabi Championship in memorable fashion — a late rally to seemingly make the cut with one shot to spare, only to be informed that he was not supposed to get relief from an imbedded lie in sandy soil on the fifth hole. Two shots were added to his score, and Woods was on his way back with only the 10th missed cut of his career, his first outside the PGA Tour and a bad start to the year.

The more important measure, however, is this week at Torrey Pines.

Woods has won seven times as a pro on this track along the Pacific bluffs. It’s a public course, but it feels as if he owns it. Such is his dominance at Torrey Pines that after the first round of the 2008 Buick Invitational, when Woods opened with a 67 on the South Course, a caddie standing behind the 18th green said, “He just won two tournaments with one round.” Sure enough, Woods won that week by eight shots, and then won the U.S. Open that summer on a mangled knee in a playoff.

That was his 14th — and at the moment, his last — major championship.

That also was his last win at Torrey Pines.

He didn’t play in 2009 because he was still recovering from knee surgery. He didn’t play in 2010 because he was recovering from the humiliating collapse in his personal life. The last time he played Torrey Pines was in 2011, which turned out to be the worst season of his career. He was embarking on a brand new swing, his game was a wreck and it showed. Woods went 74-75 on the weekend and tied for 44th.

Where is he now?

“It’s nice to be healthy, to be able to train and practice and do all of the things that I know I can do,” Woods said Tuesday after playing the back nine on the South Course. “It’s definitely a very different feeling, so it’s nice to be back. It’s nice to get out there and play a course that I know.”

When it comes to horses for courses, Woods is a thoroughbred at Torrey Pines. The only course comparable to his success level at Torrey would be Firestone, where he also has won seven times and never finished out of the top 10 until 2010 and 2011, both times when his game was a mess. He has won seven times at Bay Hill, but that’s different from the other two because Woods has seven finishes out of the top 10. Bay Hill always has been feast or famine.

“This has always been a pretty good benchmark, hasn’t it?” Geoff Ogilvy said.

If he doesn’t win this week, it certainly wouldn’t be a disaster. Woods is getting older, and the competition is getting deeper every year. Winning is not as easy as it was.

But how he plays this week could be a fair measure of his game going into a pivotal year when the balance of power has shifted to 23-year-old Rory McIlroy. Woods talks a lot about the courses where he feels most comfortable, with Torrey Pines and Firestone at the top of his list.

He also includes Augusta National and St. Andrews.