Woods plans US Open bid without a coach
Tiger Woods has announced he has no plans to appoint a new coach in the near future as he bids to win his 15th Major title at the 2010 US Open
Tiger Woods has announced he has no plans to appoint a new coach in the near future as he bids to win his 15th Major title at the 2010 US Open.
Woods' coach of six years, Hank Haney, recently resigned from his duties for the world number one.
Jack Nicklaus has gone on record saying Woods needs to win a Major very soon if he is to overtake his own long-standing record of Major championship victories, however Woods is confident in his own tuition going into the second Major of the year.
"I've been using video and working on my game that way," said Woods.
"That's the great thing about technology. I have no plans for a new coach."
"The last six months have been pretty tough but I'm starting to get into my routine of playing, which is something I haven't done."
The 34-year-old has had a mixed bag in terms of his results since his return from the break following the allegations of his private life.
Get the Golf Monthly Newsletter
Subscribe to the Golf Monthly newsletter to stay up to date with all the latest tour news, equipment news, reviews, head-to-heads and buyer’s guides from our team of experienced experts.
However he now returns to Pebble Beach, the scene of his historic US Open triumph in 2000 where he set the tournament record for most shots under par (-12), as well as the record for the largest winning margin in a US Open, 15 strokes.
The US Open begins on Thursday, June 17.
Where Next?
US Open news US Open blogs US Open pictures US Open history and records Pebble Beach hole-by-hole
-
5 Things We Learned From Greg Norman's LIV Adelaide Press Conference
The Shark weighed into a number of the game's major talking points ahead of the LIV Golf Adelaide event
By Andrew Wright Published
-
YouTube Star George Bryan Comes Within Inches Of PGA Tour Start At Qualifying Event
The YouTube star appeared set for a place at the Myrtle Beach Classic, but a near miss on the 18th left him in a playoff, which Matt Atkins won
By Mike Hall Published