The Tiger Woods Biography and the Price of Greatness: What 35 Years in Golf Taught Me About Ambition
I’ve been around professional golf long enough to know that talent alone doesn’t create legends. I’ve caddied for Tom Lehman, watched fifteen Masters tournaments unfold, and covered more PGA Tour drama than I care to admit. So when a new biography threatens to reframe one of the sport’s greatest players as someone willing to burn bridges—even with his first true love—to fuel his rise, it deserves more than tabloid treatment. It deserves context.
Gavin Newsham’s forthcoming book, “Project Tiger: The Birth of Genius and the Price of Greatness,” has resurfaced a painful moment from Tiger Woods’ college years that, frankly, tells us something uncomfortable about what it takes to reach the mountaintop in professional golf. And I think we need to talk about it honestly.
The Letter That Changed Everything
For those who haven’t seen the details: during the 1995 US Intercollegiate Golf Tournament in Palo Alto, a then-college-age Woods ended his four-year relationship with high school sweetheart Dina Gravell in a way that can only be described as brutal. While he was at the hospital getting an MRI for a shoulder injury, Gravell waited five hours in their hotel without hearing from him. Then came the phone call—not from Tiger, but from hotel reception.
“It was a case with all of her belongings that she had left in Tiger’s room the previous day.”
Inside was a letter. Having spent decades around competitive athletes, I’ve seen many ways relationships end in professional sports. This one stands out. The letter reportedly read in part:
“The reason for writing this letter is to inform you [that] my parents and myself never want to talk or hear from you again… I feel used and manipulated by you and your family… Don’t show up at the tournament tomorrow because you are just not welcomed.”
Gravell later described it to HBO filmmakers as feeling like being “punched in the stomach.” In my experience covering professional golf, I’ve learned that athletes at the highest echelon often have a capacity for compartmentalization that borders on the clinical. But this? This went beyond single-minded focus. This was calculated.
The Architecture of “Project Tiger”
What strikes me most about this biography isn’t just the Gravell story—it’s the pattern Newsham identifies. According to the book, Gravell wasn’t alone in becoming what Newsham calls “surplus to requirements.” Joe Grohman, a young pro who mentored Woods in Cypress, and his former agent Hughes Norton also found themselves “out in the cold” when they no longer served a purpose in Woods’ master plan.
In thirty-five years covering this tour, I’ve seen ambitious players. I’ve seen hungry players. But there’s a specific breed of athlete—the kind that produces 15 major championships—who operates according to a different calculus. They measure relationships and associations in terms of forward progress. Everything else gets discarded.
Was this driven by Woods’ parents, Earl and Kultida, who molded him from childhood to be a golfing machine? The HBO documentary and Newsham’s work both suggest yes. But at some point, the player becomes responsible for his own choices. Woods was at Stanford, an adult, capable of making his own decisions. He chose this path.
The Real Question: What Did It Cost?
Here’s where I think the narrative gets interesting, though—and where I try to avoid being preachy. Yes, Woods’ ruthless elimination of anyone who didn’t fit “the plan” helped create the greatest golfer of a generation. But what was the actual price?
Look at his personal life over the past two decades. The 2009 infidelity scandal that collapsed his marriage to Elin Nordegren. The publicized struggles with substance abuse. The multiple surgeries and comebacks. The man who could execute a perfect iron shot under any pressure seemed unable to navigate the messiness of human connection. I’m not a psychologist, but I’ve interviewed enough sports psychologists to know this: when you build someone to see relationships as transactional from age five onward, you create someone who struggles when relationships actually matter.
The good news? Woods has shown genuine growth. His reconciliation with competitive golf after multiple back surgeries, his comeback to win the 2019 Masters at age 43—that required humility and resilience. His current relationship with Vanessa Trump, whom he went public with last March, seems grounded in something healthier. He’s a grandfather figure now in some respects, mentoring younger players with what appears to be genuine generosity.
What This Really Means
Newsham’s book isn’t really an indictment of Tiger Woods the golfer. It’s a study in the mechanics of creating greatness, and the collateral damage that comes with it. In my three and a half decades in this sport, I’ve learned that the players who dominate—truly dominate—almost always have to make what the book calls “complex and painful trade-offs.”
The question isn’t whether Woods should feel remorse about how he treated Gravell. That’s between him and his conscience. The question is: what does this tell us about the culture we’ve built around elite athletics? We celebrate the 15 majors, the comeback narrative, the competitive fire. But we rarely sit with the human cost of creating that fire in the first place.
Tiger Woods became the greatest golfer alive by being willing to make choices most of us wouldn’t make. That’s not a flaw in his character; it’s the feature that made him great. But it’s worth understanding what that actually looks like up close—including the hotel delivery boxes and the five-hour waits and the letters that felt like punches to the stomach.
That’s the real story “Project Tiger” is telling us. And in my view, that story matters.

