There's a trust issue

Mark Wogenrich

The Morning Call

Perhaps it's just the product of book marketing, but the title of Hank Haney's new book "The Big Miss" certainly hints at revelations beyond golf. What miss could Haney possibly be referencing, considering Tiger Woods won 31 events and six majors during their six years together?


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For Woods to address Haney's book with more than his go-to defense mechanism — "It is what it is" — something in it must burn Tiger. If the book dissolves a trust he expected would remain after their split, he has a right to be critical.

But Woods also sets his bar of betrayal comparatively low, so what might seem innocuous to Haney becomes a serious breach to Woods. Before being pre-emptively wounded, Tiger at least could request an advance copy.

mwogenrich@tribune.com

It could be worse

Jeff Shain

Orlando Sentinel

Tiger Woods needs to take a deep breath and look on the bright side: This isn't exactly Marianne Gingrich throwing open the closet door.

Hank Haney has made it pretty clear that anyone looking for dirt on Pornstar A or Realitybabe Q is going to be disappointed. This is his account of their time building a swing that at its peak won nearly every other time Woods teed up.

Woods can't be out to protect swing secrets. What sells the book is a rare glimpse of being inside Woods' inner circle, for whatever Haney witnessed.

Though the coach has said little publicly about that byplay, he's hinted about seeing Tiger give "the treatment" to those who got in his way. Maybe that's the concern?

jshain@tribune.com

Nothing 'unprofessional'

Diane Pucin

Los Angeles Times

Hank Haney spent a lot of time with Tiger Woods once. He was the coach, a mentor and maybe, from the sounds of it, somewhat of a friend to Woods.

Now Haney is an ex-coach, ex-mentor and, from the sounds of it, an ex-friend.