Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the reigning MVP, is getting better at everything — in case you haven't noticed

Part of the problem — to the extent that thereisa problem, anyway — is the dunking. Its absence, I mean.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has played 703 minutes in the 2025-26 NBA season, and he hasfour slam dunks. As in, one fewer than five. IV, if you want to get all Roman about it.Solamente cuatro.

Three of them came against the Kings, too. Which, y'know, if a tree falls in the forest, and all that:

And then there the assists. Don't get me wrong: Gilgeous-Alexander iscapableof the kinds of thread-the-needle-in-traffic, lefty-hook-pass-on-the-move, cross-court-fastball-right-in-the-shooting-pocket feeds that generateoohsandaahs…

… but SGAonly throws about 40 passes per game, and more often than not, his setups skew simpler. Draw two to the ball, because they know if they try to guard you straight up, they're dead where they stand. Take it slow, play off two feet, and keep your eyes up. Find a teammate — either the one who's exactly where he's supposed to be, or the one who's about to get there, because at this point, the defending NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder, off to a 20-1 start and looking like a threat torewrite the record books, can probably playthe hand blind.

Make the easy pass, create the wide-open shot, and profit. Then, when you get the stop — and you're going to get the stop, because you've got the best defense not only ofthisNBA season, but perhaps ofthe last 50— come down and do it again. And again. And again.

The individual stat lines don't help much, either, because they rarely make your eyes bulge out of your skull. Two 40-plus-point performances this season, which frankly seems low because at this point, 30 is just expected — including, famously, by the man himself:

"There was a point where I got 30 and thought it was a good game. Now if I have 30, it's a bad game.""You think 30 points is a bad game?""If I have 30, it's … I mean it's below my average."Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in Starting 5 Season 2 🗣️pic.twitter.com/KwkC9x95C4

—NetflixSports (@netflixsports)October 28, 2025

Two games with double-digit dimes, because OKC's one ofeight teams this seasonwith at least eight players averaging at least two helpers per game. No 10-rebound outings, because listen, what do you think we pay Isaiah Hartenstein for?

Besides: It's not always easy to rack up monster numbers when you're consistently getting the rest of the night off.

Shai's now played in 21 games, and has only been needed in the fourth quarter in 10 of them.https://t.co/38jaJi2euy

— Dan Devine (@YourManDevine)December 2, 2025

In an NBA dominated by kaijus posting jaw-dropping numbers, your eyes can sometimes glaze over those non-mutant box scores. Just like they slide past a smooth drive through the paint for a scoop layup, a one-dribble pull-up from the elbow or a hiccup-quick right foot jab into a stepback 3 going left.

It's hard to make memorable highlight reels out of below-the-rim finishes, midrange Js and two-hand chest passes back out to a popping Isaiah Joe. But it's also hard to make those plays again, and again, and again, with the economy of movement of an elite marathon runner, while never messing anything up.

It all contributes to a sense of frictionlessness in Gilgeous-Alexander's ongoing growth, from lottery pick to trade-haul jewel to starter to All-Star to All-NBA to All-Everything. (OK, maybe there's beensomefriction.) How do you track the development of a player whomade a leap three years agoand then … just hasn't stopped leaping?

We all know the saying about how progress isn't linear. That's the thing, though: These lines look awfully straight.

SGA DARKO SGA EPM

Lest we glaze over or slide past, let's say it plainly: Gilgeous-Alexander won the scoring title, regular-season MVP, Western Conference Finals MVP, Finals MVP and the NBA championship last season. And this season, thus far, he has been even better. At virtually everything.

"He's to the point now where he's touching up the edges," Thunder head coach Mark Daigneaulttold Sam Amick of The Athleticearlier this season. "Your growth curve tends to be much higher earlier on, as you are accumulating experiences. But he's subtly getting better. He's had a great defensive start (to this season). On the offensive end, he's moving it earlier and with more intentionality than he ever has. He's been on that track."

And, in the process, on the track to what could wind up being one of the greatest individual seasons we've ever seen. Pick your all-in-one advanced stat of choice — player efficiency rating, win shares per 48 minutes, box plus-minus, estimated plus-minus, DARKO, LEBRON, etc. — and Gilgeous-Alexander is, for the fourth straight year, on pace for a career year.

(Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

SGA is scoring more points and delivering more assistsper minuteandper possession. He's shooting 59.2% on 2-point shots, including55% on midrange looks, and 41.1% on 3-point attempts, including43.2% on pull-up triples— all of which would be career highs.

He's scoring 1.21 points per possession that he finishes himself after serving as theball-handler in the pick-and-roll, 1.14 points per possession out ofisolation, 1.47 points per possession attacking intransition, 1.22 points per possession going to workin the post, and 1.2 points per possession off drives to the basket, according to Synergy — all of which would be career highs. And when you factor in the possessions where he passes to a teammate who shoots, the Thunder are averaging 1.14 points per play out of SGA's pick-and-rolls and isos, and 1.16 points per SGA post-up — all up from his MVP season.

Gilgeous-Alexander has notched the assist on 34.4% of his teammates' baskets while he's on the floor, and has coughed the ball up just 37 times in 703 minutes — an infinitesimal 6.8% turnover rate. Those would both be career-best marks, too. The only player inStathead's databaseto finish a full season with a usage rate as highanda turnover rate as low as what SGA's posted thus far? Michael Jeffrey Jordan.

While the Thunder haven't needed SGA's services to close out many of theirleague-leading 13 double-digit wins, when theyhavefound themselves in sticky situations, he's been the best closer in the league. Asmy podcast partnerTom Haberstrohrecently highlighted, despite playing in just nine "clutch" games — defined as contests in which the score is within five points in the final five minutes of the fourth quarter or overtime — Gilgeous-Alexander leads the NBA in close-and-late scoring, with80 points in 50 "clutch" minuteson 52.4% shooting. AsNBA.com's John Schuhmann notes, that isalreadymore points than Shai scored in the clutch all of last season (67), and in those 50 minutes, he's committedoneturnover. (It's no surprise, then, thatMike Beuoy's model at Inpredictableprojects SGA as the frontrunner for this season's Clutch Player of the Year award.)

No player to average 30 points per gamehas ever hada true shooting percentage (which factors in 2-point, 3-point and free-throw accuracy) as high as SGA's .674 mark. That means he's on pace to produce the most efficient high-scoring season in NBA history, topping Stephen Curry's 2015-16 season — a campaign in which Curry, fresh off a championship,won his second consecutive MVP trophy.

[Get more Thunder news: Oklahoma City team feed]

As you might remember, that yeardidn't endquitethe waythat Curry and his Warriors — whose 73 regular-season wins remain the high-water markthat OKC is chasing— had hoped it would. And after getting taken the distance by Denver and Indiana en route to the 2025 title, Gilgeous-Alexander knows that what matters most is sticking the landing.

"I don't think as a group we played our best basketball in that playoff run," Gilgeous-Alexandertold ESPN's Tim MacMahonearlier this season. "And I don't think as a player, I played my best basketball for the whole run. Granted, it's basketball, it's going to happen — but I had droughts, and there's a reason why I had droughts. We had droughts as a team, and there's a reason why we had droughts and meltdowns and things like that. We have to learn from those experiences and be better."

June's a long way off; what happens before then is only preamble. All Gilgeous-Alexander can do between now and then is what he's always done: just make the next play. Again, and again, and again.

"The things we want are so complicated and so hard to get," Gilgeous-Alexandertold MacMahon. "When you just focus on the simple things and the little things, you'll look up and be there one day."

Maybe the most interesting question on the board: When Gilgeous-Alexander finallydoeslook up, just how far will he have come? Just how high in the ranks of NBA royalty will he have climbed?

"He can get better," Daigneaulttold Amick. "... He seems to be kind of managing the game and manipulating the defense more often and more consistently than he ever has."

A version of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander that does those things better, more often and more consistently than he is right now … well, that sounds like one of the best players of all time. The highlights might never be all that loud. But then, it's the quiet ones you've got to watch.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the reigning MVP, is getting better at everything — in case you haven't noticed

Part of the problem — to the extent that thereisa problem, anyway — is the dunking. Its absence, I mean. Shai Gi...
5-star QB and Georgia commit Jared Curtis says he's not talked to Bulldogs or Vanderbilt after reported flip to Commodores

Is five-star quarterback Jared Curtis sticking with Georgia or flipping to Vanderbilt?

Hours after Rivals reportedthat Curtis would change his commitment to stay in Nashville and play for the Commodores, Curtis said that he had not talked to either Georgia or Vanderbilt yet. The early signing period for high school recruits begins on Wednesday.

Don't know where all this is coming from. Haven't had a chance to talk to either school yet. I'll keep y'all posted.

— Jared Curtis 2026 QB (@Jaredcurtis37)December 2, 2025

Curtis is the No. 3 recruitin the country according to Rivals and the No. 2 QB in the country as well as the top prospect in the state of Tennessee. He's been committed to Georgia since May.

"Elite arm talent with creative playmaking ability," Rivals director of scouting Charles Power said about Curtis. "Looks like the top arm talent in the 2026 cycle. Ball explodes off his hand. Generates considerable velocity on throws to all areas of the field. Has a loose, natural throwing motion. Capable of delivering impressive passes from several arm angles. A pure rotational athlete who does not need his feet set to throw accurate passes. Plays with a gunslinging mentality and is not afraid to drive the football into tight windows over the middle of the field. A fluid athlete who is tough to corral in the backfield. Dangerous playmaker and improviser. Had some unbelievable second-reaction plays as a junior, evading pass rushers and uncorking throws 50+ yards downfield."

If Curtis does change his commitment, he'd be the highest-ranked player to sign with the Commodores out of high school. Curtis goes to Nashville Christian High School and the Commodores have an opening at starting quarterback with Diego Pavia's eligibility up at the end of the 2025 season.

Vanderbilt went 10-2 during the regular season and signed coach Clark Lea to a six-year extension over the Thanksgiving holiday. Lea was mentioned as a potential candidate at both LSU and Florida — the Tigers hired Lane Kiffin from Ole Miss and Florida went with Tulane's Jon Sumrall — as Vanderbilt posted double-digit wins for the first time in school history.

A Curtis commitment would give Vanderbilt the No. 30 class in the country, according to Rivals. He'd also be the program's only five or four-star recruit at the moment, with 19 three-star players set to sign with the Commodores. Georgia, meanwhile, has a top-five class that includes five-star tight end Kaiden Prothro and 19 four-star recruits as the Bulldogs are set to play Alabama for the SEC title on Saturday.

5-star QB and Georgia commit Jared Curtis says he's not talked to Bulldogs or Vanderbilt after reported flip to Commodores

Is five-star quarterback Jared Curtis sticking with Georgia or flipping to Vanderbilt? Hours after Rivals report...
Spain keeps Women's Nations League title as Pina scores twice in 3-0 victory over Germany

MADRID (AP) — Clàudia Pina scored twice and Germany crumbled as Spain retained the Women's Nations League title with a 3-0 victory in the final's second leg Tuesday.

Vicky López also scored after Pina finally broke the deadlock in the 61st minute with Germany stubbornly hanging on as Spain had done in the first leg, a0-0 draw in Kaiserslauternon Friday.

Spain was without three-time Ballon d'Or winner Aitana Bonmatí, whobroke her leg in trainingon Sunday.

López took Bonmatí's place and Spain dominated from the start. Esther González swept the ball just past the post and Mariona Caldentey forced a save from Ann-Katrin Berger early on as the flag-waving fans roared encouragement.

Nearly 56,000 supporters attended the match at Atlético Madrid's Metropolitano Stadium, easily a record for the Spanish team at home. Many children were also present on a cold night in the Spanish capital. None of the supporters seemed to mind the cold with most staying in their seats long after the final whistle.

"One of the most magical nights we have ever experienced, one of the best in my career," two-time Ballon d'Or winner Alexia Putellas said.

"Some of us have been playing for the national team for 13 years and never imagined this," Putellas said of the attendance. "It says a lot about what we have achieved with women's soccer in Spain. We will continue to inspire girls and boys to fight for their dreams, which sometimes come true."

González tried her luck with an acrobatic scissors kick, and Mariona, López, and Mariona again all had good chances before the break, with Berger doing well to deny the latter.

Nicole Anyomi had a rare opportunity for Germany in a one-on-one with Cata Coll before the halftime whistle, only to drag her shot wide of the right post.

"That has to go in, and she had another one in the box in the second half," Germany coach Christian Wuck said. "That's the difference between us and the technically gifted Spanish players."

Pina got the party underway in the 61st when she breezed past a German defender and played a one-two with Mariona before beating Berger with a low shot. Berger got her hand to the ball but couldn't stop its progress inside the right post.

The 19-year-old López scored seven minutes later when she cut in from the right and unleashed a curling shot inside the far post.

Pina sealed the win in the 74th after getting a gift of the ball from Germany's Janina Minge. The Barcelona forward set off for goal and let fly from around 20 meters (yards) past the despairing Berger.

"The goal was to win again and retain the Nations League title. It was all worth it," Sonia Bermúdez said after winning her first title as Spain coach. The former team captain took over from Montse Tomé in August.

It was only Spain's second win over old foe Germany. The previous came at the European Championship last summer whenBonmatí scored in extra timefor a 1-0 win in the semifinals. Spain went on to lose to England on penalties in the final.

That was the only disappointment after reaching the finals of the last four tournaments. Spain beat England in the 2023 Women's World Cup and bettered France in the 2024 Women's Nations League. Tuesday's win over Germany makes it three wins from four finals.

AP Sports Writer Ciarán Fahey contributed from Berlin.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Spain keeps Women's Nations League title as Pina scores twice in 3-0 victory over Germany

MADRID (AP) — Clàudia Pina scored twice and Germany crumbled as Spain retained the Women's Nations League title with ...
More people admit to stealing at self-checkouts. The reason may surprise you

More than one in four Americans who have used self-checkouts said they have intentionally taken an item without scanning it, according to aLendingTree survey of 2,050 consumers.

The share of Americans who admitted stealing from self-checkouts rose sharply from 2023, when 15 percent said they had done so.

In the 2025 survey, men were twice as likely as women to steal using self-checkouts. Just 2 percent of baby boomers admitted to intentionally not scanning items, compared with 41 percent of millennials.

Additionally, 36 percent of consumers said they have unintentionally left with an unscanned item. Of those, 61 percent said they kept the item without paying.

RELATED STORY |Why self-checkout has become controversial

The top reason respondents cited for stealing was that the current financial climate makes paying for essentials unaffordable (47 percent). Other leading reasons included price increases tied to tariffs (46 percent) and the belief that prices are unfair or too high (39 percent).

About one in three people who stole said they were not remorseful, and more than half said they would likely steal again.

Many consumers also recognized the risk of getting caught. The survey found that 46 percent of those who said they purposely stole were caught. In addition, 42 percent of self-checkout users said stealing at self-checkouts has become more difficult, while 10 percent said it has become less difficult.

"Largely unattended self-checkouts provide a potential opportunity for folks to help themselves," said Matt Schulz, LendingTree's chief credit analyst. "Even though people know that stealing is wrong and most understand the risk they're taking, tough times require tough choices, and lots of people are clearly willing to take a risk."

About 14 percent of self-checkout users reported they had been accused of not scanning an item even though they did.

More people admit to stealing at self-checkouts. The reason may surprise you

More than one in four Americans who have used self-checkouts said they have intentionally taken an item without scanning ...
Man charged in National Guard shooting pleads not guilty during court appearance from hospital bed

WASHINGTON (AP) — A man accused of shootingtwo National Guard troopsnear the White House pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to murder and assault charges during his first appearance before a judge, appearing remotely by video from a hospital bed.

Rahmanullah Lakanwal, a29-year-old Afghan nationalwho was also shot during last Wednesday's confrontation, said through an interpreter that he was in pain and couldn't open his eyes. A court-appointed defense attorney entered Lakanwal's plea on his behalf during a brief hearing in Washington, D.C.

Lakanwal is charged with first-degree murder, assault with intent to kill and illegal possession of a firearm in the shooting that killedSpecialist Sarah Beckstrom, 20, and woundedStaff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24.

Another National Guard member heard gunshots and saw Beckstrom and Wolfe fall to the ground as Lakanwal fired a gun and screamed, "Allahu Akbar!" according to a police report filed in court on Tuesday. Lakanwal chased after and shot at another Guard member before troops detained him as he tried to reload his gun, the report says.

D.C. Superior Court Judge Renee Raymond ordered Lakanwal held without bond. His case is due back in court on Jan. 14.

Beckstrom and Wolfe were deployed with the West Virginia National Guard for President Donald Trump's law-enforcement surge in the nation's capital, which has flooded the city with federal agents and troops since August.

Authorities were investigating a possible motive for what they described as an ambush-style attack.

A prosecutor, Ariel Dean, described the shooting as a "shocking crime" and said it appears that Lakanwal "traversed the city to some extent" before approaching the troops and shooting them.

Raymond ordered him detained, citing the "sheer terror that resulted" from Lakanwal's actions. The magistrate said it appears that Lakanwal, a resident of Washington state, travelled across the country "with a specific purpose in mind." She described the government's case against him as "exceedingly strong."

Defense attorney Terrence Austin noted that Lakanwal doesn't have any prior criminal record.

After the hearing, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said Lakanwal will be taken to a correctional facility that can address his "medical concerns" once he is well enough to leave the hospital.

The rare shooting of National Guard members on American soil came amidcourt fightsand a broader public policy debate about the Trump administration's use of the military to combat what officials cast as an out-of-control crime problem.

Lakanwal entered the U.S. in 2021 throughOperation Allies Welcome,a Biden administration program that resettled Afghans after the U.S. withdrawal from the country, officials said. Lakanwal applied for asylum during the Biden administration, but his asylum was approved under the Trump administration, #AfghanEvac said in a statement.

Trump called the shooting a "terrorist attack" and criticized the Biden administration for enabling Afghans who worked with U.S. forces during the Afghanistan War to enter the U.S. The president has said he wants to"permanently pause migration" from poorer nationsand expel millions of immigrants from the country.

Man charged in National Guard shooting pleads not guilty during court appearance from hospital bed

WASHINGTON (AP) — A man accused of shootingtwo National Guard troopsnear the White House pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to...

A person is detained by NYPD as immigration activists block a garage used by ICE vans during a protest against a purported ICE raid on Canal Street on November 29, 2025 in New York City. Credit - Stephanie Keith—Getty Images

President Donald Trump has sharply escalated his efforts to restrict legal pathways to immigration following the killing of aNational Guard membernear the White House last week.

Law enforcement's identification of 29-year-old Afghan national Rahmanullah Lakanwal as the suspected gunman in last week's deadly shooting prompted Trump to ramp up his anti-immigrant rhetoric and enact sweeping newrestrictions on legal immigration.

The Trump Administration's review of immigration processes includes a pause on all asylum decisions, changes to Green Card vetting, and a pause on all visas for Afghans.

Lakanwal, who reportedly worked with theCIAin the U.S. military's nearly 20-year fight against the Taliban, arrived in America through a Biden-era program, Operation Allies Welcome. The program helped Afghans who worked with the U.S. military or government evacuate the country after the Taliban returned to power in 2021. Lakanwal obtained asylum under the Trump Administrationearlier this year. One of the Guardsmen that Lakanwal attacked, Sarah Beckstrom, 20, has died, while the other, Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, remains in critical condition.

Read more:Trump Calls Shooting of National Guard Members an 'Act of Terror' and Launches Immigration Crackdown

Shawn VanDiver, president of nonprofit AfghanEvac, which works with Afghan allies to help resettle, said in a statement on Friday that the Trump Administration is using collective punishment for the actions of one man.

"They are using a single violent individual as cover for a policy they have long planned, turning their own intelligence failures into an excuse to punish an entire community and the veterans who served alongside them," he said. "This is not a policy dispute. It is a deliberate abandonment of our wartime allies and a breach of America's word."

The Afghan Community Coalition of the United States issued condolences to the families of the victims of the shooting, but asked that the country not forget the "twenty years of Afghan-US partnership."

Here is what we know about the changes the Trump Administration has made so far.

Green Card restrictions

Immediately following the shooting, President Trump said in a post on Truth Social post that he would "permanently pause migration from all Third World Countries" and "terminate all of the millions of Biden illegal admissions," without providing further details on which countries he was referring to.

The same day, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) director Joe Edlow said he had directed a "full-scale, rigorous reexamination of every green card for every alien from every country of concern."

Edlow did not elaborate which countries "of concern" would be reevaluated, but in an email to TIME, the USCIS confirmed that the list stemmed from aJune White House proclamationthat imposed new travel and visa restrictions on citizens of 19 countries. These countries include Afghanistan, Burma, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen, all of whom would be "fully" restricted from entry. It also included a second tier of "partially" restricted countries: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela.

Newguidancefrom the USCIS, published on Nov. 27, explained that the department will "consider country-specific factors" from these nations. It does not provide examples of what those factors will be.

"My primary responsibility is to ensure that every alien is vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible," Edlow saidin a statementthe day after the attack. "This includes an assessment of where they are coming from and why. Yesterday's horrific events make it abundantly clear the Biden administration spent the last four years dismantling basic vetting and screening standards, prioritizing the rapid resettlement of aliens from high-risk countries over the safety of American citizens."

Despite the Trump Administration's claims that immigrants, including those welcomed under Operation Allies Welcome, were not "vetted," the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) archived page for the program says that all those admitted went through a "rigorous screening and vetting process," which was "multi-layered and ongoing," and included several different agencies.

Pause in asylum decisions

USCIS and Edlow also announced Friday that the United States paused all asylum adjudications until Edlow says the department "can ensure that every alien is vetted and screened to the maximum degree possible."

Asylum officers at the USCIS, which is under the DHS, were instructed not to approve, deny or close any asylum applications received, according toCBS News reporting.

Immigrants applying for asylum are those requesting protection out of fear of return to their home country due to persecution, well-founded fear of being persecuted in the future, "on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion."

Trump said Sunday that he intends to maintain a pause on asylum decisions for "a long time," consistent with his Administration's crackdown on both legal and illegal immigration, and included his attempt to build and carry out the country's largest mass deportation operation in history.

"We don't want those people," Trump said. "You know why we don't want them? Because many have been no good, and they shouldn't be in our country."

Pause on Afghan Visas

Another change has specifically targeted Afghan immigrants as a result of the D.C. shooting: the pause on all visa issuances to Afghan nationals.

"The United States has no higher priority than protecting our nation and our people," Secretary of State Marco Rubiosaid on Xwhen the policy was announced on Friday.

Afghan refugees were already facing uncertaintyearlier this yearafter Trump suspended theRefugee Admissions Programwhen he entered office and implemented travel-ban-related pauses affecting Afghan nationals.

Rubio's new policy effectively halts, for now, theSpecial Immigrant Visaprogramfor Afghans,utilized by people who had helped out the U.S. military and government in the war, and had bipartisan support. After the country fell back into the hands of the Taliban, Afghans who fought with the U.S. military had expedited processes for safety, though they still went through vetting processes. The U.S. admitted close to 200,000 Afghans under various humanitarian pathways after 2021.

"It appears Secretary Rubio is attempting to shut down the Afghan Special Immigrant Visa program in direct violation of federal law and standing court orders," VanDiver said in a statement. "Our hearts are absolutely broken for our Afghan allies, who have already endured more trauma, loss, and sacrifice than most Americans can imagine."

At the end of 2024, over 36 million people in the world were refugees, and close to one in six of them were from Afghanistan, according to theUN Refugee Agency.

The asylum move follows similar moves already underway by the Trump Administration, including a recently reported Reuters memo that ordered a broad review of all refugees who entered under former President Joe Biden, which could reopen cases for thousands who sought U.S. protection.

Contact usatletters@time.com.

What We Know About Immigration Changes Since the D.C. Shooting

A person is detained by NYPD as immigration activists block a garage used by ICE vans during a protest against a purported ICE raid on Cana...
Tiger Woods shares updates ahead of the Hero World Challenge event in the Bahamas. (David Cannon/Getty Images)

If it's December, it's time for the Hero World Challenge, the Tiger Woods-hosted 20-man tournament in the Bahamas that caps off the golf year. Woods' foundation is a beneficiary of the event, and Woods himself holds a press conference at the start of every tournament week.

Unfortunately for fans of Woods, those press conferences in recent years have tended to be ever-more-grim updates on Woods' ever-more-fragile health. Woods hasn't played on the PGA Tour since his appearance at the 2024 Open Championship. Earlier this fall, he underwent yet another back surgery that will keep him off the course for an indeterminate length of time.

"I need time to figure this out with my back and with my body," Woods said Tuesday morning. "As I start to get more explosive and start to rotate and see what I've got, then I can find out or assess what tournaments I could play in, how much I should play, where I would like to play."

In the past, Woods has indicated that he'll pare his schedule back to a few select events, including majors and significant tournaments on the PGA Tour. He's also played the PNC Challenge with son Charlie, and competed in the debut season of TGL, the indoor golf league, but indicated Tuesday that both of those are off the table for now.

"I just started to chip and putt, I just started to lift in the gym, I just started this process. A disc replacement takes time," he said. "It's not as long as a fusion, thank God, but it's going to take time."

Woods noted that he'd spent significant time watching the 2025 Ryder Cup at Bethpage, including conversations with most of the U.S. team. But when asked if he'd be interested in the 2027 captaincy at Adare Manor, he said, "No one's asked me about it." Asked directly about the captaincy, he repeated his same line.

Over the course of several questions, Woods delved into the thorny matter of the PGA Tour's future — specifically, the idea of scarcity weighed against the need to sustain and increase revenue while satisfying sponsor and broadcast obligations.

"We're trying to give the fans the best product we possibly can, and if we're able to give the fans the best product we can, I think we can make the players who have equity in the Tour, we can give them more of that," he said. "So the financial windfall could be fantastic for everyone who's involved."

As a member of the Tour's Future Competition Committee, Woods has a significant role in shaping the future direction of the Tour, whatever direction that might be. "We're trying to figure out what is the best schedule possible so we can create the best fields and have the most viewership and also the most fan involvement," he said.

"I know I'm not really saying a whole lot, but I'm trying to say as much as I possibly can because there's so many moving parts to this and it changes all the time," he said. "It all starts with the best tour on the planet, which is ours."

Asked why he wanted to mount another comeback, Woods was more contemplative than his past conquer-everything self. "I'd like to come back to just playing golf again," he said. "I haven't played golf in a long time. It's been a tough year."

'It’s been a tough year': Tiger Woods shares updates on health, Ryder Cup, PGA Tour’s future

If it's December, it's time for the Hero World Challenge, the Tiger Woods-hosted 20-man tournament in the Bahamas that caps off the...

 

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