Tiger Woods has fought back from a poor start in the second round at the US Masters, earning a mini victory of sorts by making the halfway cut at his first tournament since a career-threatening car crash.
Though a distant nine strokes behind leader Scottie Scheffler, Woods goes into the weekend equal 19th at one-over-par 145 at Augusta National.
That's not be a bad spot for any 46-year-old, much less someone whose career seemed in jeopardy, when he was badly injured in single-car rollover last February.
"I'm proud of the fact that my whole team got me into this position," he said. "We worked hard to get me here to where I had an opportunity."
He seems extremely unlikely to earn a sixth 'Green Jacket' - he was placed no worse than sixth after 36 holes in each of his previous wins - but he was hardly ready to throw in the towel.
"Hopefully, I'll have one of those light-bulb moments and turn it on in the weekend, and get it done," he said. "If you are within five or six going into the back nine, anything can happen.
"I need to get myself there. That's the key."
Spectators with weekend tickets must have held their collective breath, when Woods bogeyed four of the first four holes in cool, blustery conditions, a missed cut looming as a possibility.
He didn't do an awful lot wrong on the most difficult stretch of the course - a slightly mishit shot here and there - but it was starting to add up to a potentially big score.
"I got a couple of bad gusts and also made a couple of bad swings on top of that," he said. "Then on [the fourth hole], I ended up in a divot.
"It was just, like, 'okay, what else can go wrong?'"
He was two under the rest of the day, shooting two-over-par 74.
With his post-round interviews done, he headed off for a long ice bath.
Asked how he felt, he said: "I don't feel as good as I'd like to feel.
"I expected to be sore and not feel my best for sure. I can walk this golf course, that's not a problem, but going ballistically at shots and hitting shot shapes off of uneven lies, that puts a whole new challenge to it."
Reuters