The Sunday Times is a well-regarded national newspaper in Britain.
Yesterday, its magazine led with the cover story "I'm not the only swinger in the club; How Tiger's behaviour became par for the course". It spoke of the entirely routine nature of Woods' activities, where "fixers" from his team would recruit women and set up the rendezvous. They would pick out the women in a club or restaurant and the women would be told to appear at a certain hotel room at a certain time, booked under a fake name. Tiger would then appear through a connecting door.
The final paragraph of the feature reads,
"When Tiger made his cringey televised apology earlier this year, he said sorry to his wife and his sponsors for letting them down.
He never expressed any regret for the pain he�d caused his mistresses. It was as if they were toys to be used and discarded, as if the fact they might have feelings too never crossed his mind.�The one time out of the whole year and a half I was with Tiger I asked him, �Can you please help me out?� � said one of Woods� girls, Las Vegas lingerie model Jamie Jungers. �I didn�t give him a dollar amount, or say, �Can you buy me a house?� I wasn�t specific, I just said, �Can you help me out?� He said, �I can�t.� I thought he must be joking. I was already embarrassed to ask. And that�s when I told him. That�s how much I mean to you, and I can�t do this any more� I loved him. I still love him. But I didn�t even get a birthday card. I got nothing out of this relationship but a broken heart.�
As the world of golf hugs Tiger back to its multibillion-dollar bosom,
let�s spare a thought for the women he left behind."
The article deplores his treatment of the women, but not of his wife.
Priceless.
Tiger's swinging