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McIlroy: Tiger's not Superman, he's human

Phil Casey,AAP
Dustin Johnson hopes Tiger Woods, seen here in last year's Masters, can make a Hogan-like comeback.
Camera IconDustin Johnson hopes Tiger Woods, seen here in last year's Masters, can make a Hogan-like comeback.

Rory McIlroy believes that thoughts of Tiger Woods making a golf comeback following his terrible car accident should not be "even on the map at this point".

World No.1 Dustin Johnson, though, is still hoping, as with everyone in golf, that the great fighter Woods can complete a Ben Hogan-style return to the game.

Woods underwent surgery on significant injuries to his right leg after the single-vehicle accident in Los Angeles on Tuesday morning.

A statement on his website said the 15-time major winner was "responsive and recovering in his hospital room" following the operation where open fractures to his tibia and fibula and further injuries to his foot and ankle were stabilised with the insertion of a rod, screws and pins.

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The severity of the injuries has inevitability raised questions about whether Woods will be able to return to competitive action, but McIlroy's concerns, as he was preparing for the World Golf Championship event in Bradenton, Florida, lay elsewhere.

Asked if Woods, who was already sidelined following a fifth back operation, could recover, McIlroy said: "He's not Superman, he's a human being at the end of the day and he's already been through so much so at this stage everyone should just be grateful that he's here, he's alive, that his kids haven't lost their dad.

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"That's the most important thing. Golf is so far from the equation right now. It's not even on the map at this point.

"I think we're all sort of heading towards that day that Tiger wasn't going to be a part of the game. I'm not saying that that was soon. Before this accident, he was rehabbing a back injury and hopefully going to come back and play this year.

"Hopefully he comes back and is able to play, but if he's not, I think he'll still be a part of the game in some way, whether it's obviously his design business and his foundation and hosting golf tournaments.

"It might be the end of seeing the genius at work with a club in his hand, but there's still a lot of other ways that he can affect the game in a great way."

Johnson brought up the tale of the great Hogan, who recovered from a near-fatal car crash with a bus in 1949 to win six of his nine major titles, including all three he could contest in 1953.

Johnson wrote on Twitter: "Hate to see the news about Tiger. Wishing him a quick recovery and a Ben Hogan style comeback. If anyone can do it, it's TW."

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