The Tiger We Don’t Like to Talk About: Ambition, Sacrifice, and the Price of Greatness
I’ve been covering professional golf for thirty-five years, and I’ve watched some of the greatest athletes in the world do extraordinary things on the course. But here’s something they don’t teach you in journalism school: sometimes the most important stories aren’t about what happens between the ropes—they’re about what happens off them.
The release of Gavin Newsham’s new biography, Project Tiger: The Birth of Genius and the Price of Greatness, has resurfaced some uncomfortable truths about Tiger Woods’ meteoric rise to becoming the greatest golfer in the world. And I’ll be honest—it’s made me reflect on a lot of conversations I had with people around Tiger during those early Stanford days.
When Ambition Trumps Everything Else
The story of how Tiger ended his four-year relationship with high school sweetheart Dina Gravell is, by any measure, brutal. According to Newsham’s account, Woods didn’t even break up with her in person. Instead, while she waited at a hotel after he withdrew from the 1995 US Intercollegiate Golf Tournament with a shoulder injury, she received a delivery of her belongings with a handwritten letter.
“The reason for writing this letter is to inform you that my parents and myself never want to talk or hear from you again. Reflecting back over this relationship, I feel used and manipulated by you and your family.”
That’s the kind of thing that stays with a person. Dina herself described it as feeling like being “punched in the stomach,” and who could blame her? They’d known each other since high school accounting class. They’d talked about marriage and children. And then—nothing.
In my thirty-five years around this game, I’ve seen what single-minded focus looks like. I caddied for Tom Lehman, a man whose dedication to golf was absolute. But there’s a difference between dedication to your craft and the kind of ruthlessness that Newsham describes in Tiger’s ascent. What strikes me about this particular story is how orchestrated it seems—how calculated. This wasn’t a young man making a messy, human mistake. This had the fingerprints of a larger system designed to eliminate distractions.
The “Project Tiger” Blueprint
Newsham’s biography suggests this wasn’t an isolated incident. The book claims that Tiger systematically distanced himself from anyone who didn’t fit into what his parents—particularly his father Earl—had envisioned for him. Joe Grohman, a young pro who had taken Tiger under his wing in Cypress, became what Newsham calls “surplus to requirements.” So did Hughes Norton, Tiger’s former agent.
Having spent time around the tour during the ’90s, I can tell you this approach was unusual, even for an elite athlete. Most of the great players I’ve covered had people—mentors, coaches, friends—who remained part of their inner circle. Jack Nicklaus had people around him who challenged him and kept him grounded. Same with Hale Irwin, Greg Norman, and others. But Tiger’s world seemed more like a corporation than a family, with people cycled in and out based on their utility to “the project.”
What’s particularly interesting—and what I think Newsham is ultimately arguing—is that this brutal efficiency worked. It did produce the greatest golfer of all time. Tiger won 15 major championships. He revolutionized the physical and mental standards of professional golf. He changed the game fundamentally. So was the price worth paying?
The Human Cost of Excellence
That’s where things get complicated, and where I think we need to be honest about what we’re celebrating when we celebrate Tiger Woods’ dominance.
The book notes that Tiger’s parents “pointedly ignored Dina” when they arrived at tournaments to support him. That’s not an accident. That’s a strategy. And the strategy worked—but at what cost? Dina wasn’t the only casualty of Project Tiger. The relationships, the mentorships, the genuine human connections that most of us rely on to stay sane and grounded—Tiger essentially had to amputate those things from his life.
“It was like a death. It was awful. We had been in this three-year relationship … I replay that day over and over again.”
Those aren’t the words of someone who was simply left for another woman. Those are the words of someone who was excised from someone’s life with surgical precision.
What we know about Tiger’s personal life since then tells us something important. His marriage to Elin Nordegren famously imploded in 2010 in what became one of the most publicized scandals in sports history. The infidelities, the chaos, the public humiliation—it all seemed like the inevitable consequence of a man who had spent his entire life optimizing for golf at the expense of everything else.
A Different Tiger Today
Here’s where I try to inject some balance into this piece, because I think it’s important: the Tiger Woods we see today is not the same Tiger Woods who sent that letter to Dina Gravell in 1995.
I’ve watched him navigate a comeback that seemed impossible. Not just physically—winning the Masters in 2019 at age 43 was extraordinary enough—but personally. He’s been in a stable relationship with Vanessa Trump, which went public last March. He’s been more openly reflective about his past. He seems, at least from a distance, to have developed some capacity for perspective about the choices he made.
That doesn’t erase the past. It doesn’t undo what happened to Dina Gravell or what happened to the other people who got cut loose along the way. But it does suggest something: that even the most relentlessly optimized human systems can evolve, can learn, can become more humane.
Tiger paid an enormous price for greatness. So did everyone around him. The question his career poses isn’t whether that price was worth it—the 15 majors suggest it might have been from a purely competitive standpoint. The real question is whether it had to be that way at all, and whether the extraordinary sacrifices were necessary or simply a choice that a young man and his family made during a particular era of golf history.
After thirty-five years in this game, I’ve learned that the greatest stories in golf are rarely about low scores. They’re about character, resilience, and what we’re willing to sacrifice—and what we shouldn’t.

