Greg Norman is now 70, FINALLY confirms these rumors…

They don’t talk. For over 20 years, two golf legends lived less than a mile apart on Florida’s exclusive Jupiter Island, but never exchanged a single word. Now, at 70 years old, Greg Norman has finally confirmed the rumors about his bitter feud with Tiger Woods. And Tiger’s ultimatum is crystal clear. For there to be peace in the golf world, Greg has to go. But how did we get here? How did the man who once mentored a teenage Tiger Woods become his biggest rival? How did a simple practice round turn into a 30-year Cold War that would eventually split professional golf in half? To understand this extraordinary war, you first have to understand the king who ruled before Tiger’s reign. Greg Norman wasn’t just a golfer. He was a global phenomenon who completely dominated the sport before Tiger ever picked up a club professionally. For an incredible 331 weeks, he held the number one ranking in the world. A record of sustained excellence that stood until Woods himself broke it in 2004. With 91 professional tournament wins worldwide, including 20 on the PGA Tour and career earnings that made him the first player in history to surpass $10 million. Norman didn’t just dominate an era of golf, he defined it. Norman’s achievements read like a masterclass in excellence. He was a three-time PGA Tour money list winner, a fivetime Byron Nelson Award recipient for lowest scoring average, and the 1995 PGA Tour player of the year. These weren’t just statistics. They were the foundation of a sporting empire. But Norman’s true genius wasn’t on the course. It was in the boardroom. He pioneered the athlete as CEO model, transforming his great white shark persona into one of the most recognizable brands in sports history. The Greg Norman company became a sprawling empire spanning over a 100 golf course designs, global apparel collections, award-winning wines, real estate developments, and even Australian prime beef. He didn’t just play the game. He revolutionized how athletes build their brands. Norman didn’t just play the game. He changed how athletes build their brands. If you’re enjoying this look into a sports icon, make sure to hit that subscribe button because the story only gets more intense from here. This carefully constructed commercial identity was built on an image of aggressive, uncompromising success. The apex predator who attacks life. Norman was more than just a nickname. He was a complete brand experience that transcended golf itself. Sure, Norman’s career had its heartbreaks. The 1996 Masters collapse, where he famously blew a six-stroke lead in the final round to lose by five shots to Nick Faldo, remains one of golf’s most painful moments. He held the unfortunate distinction of finishing as runner-up in playoffs in all four majors. And despite holding the 54 hole lead in all four majors in 1986, a feat known as the Norman slam, he won only one of them. But these weren’t just failures. They were tragic chapters that added profound depth to his complex legacy, making him more human, more relatable than the cold perfection that would eventually follow. In the early 1990s, Norman embodied everything golf royalty should be. When Earl Woods and sports management giant IMG asked him to assess a 14-year-old prodigy named Tiger, Norman graciously obliged. He played nine holes with the kid, then continued their connection through practice rounds at the Masters in 1995 and 1996. This was how the sport worked. Champions guided the next generation, just as Jack Nicholas had once taken Norman under his wing. Norman believed he was following golf’s unwritten code of honor. When he won his first major, Nicholas was the first person to congratulate him. This was the tradition Norman lived by, the respect he expected to eventually receive from Woods. It never came. The two men even shared a connection through legendary instructor Butch Harmon. Norman worked with Harmon in the early 1990s to solidify his position as world number one, and Harmon later guided Woods through his most dominant years. Harmon himself said he learned more about professionalism from Norman than from Woods, describing the Australian as 100% business during their sessions. But Woods operated differently. He didn’t seek mentorship in the traditional sense. He was gathering intelligence on his primary target. While Norman saw their interactions as the beginning of a relationship built on mutual respect, Woods viewed them as competitive reconnaissance. This fundamental misunderstanding planted the seed of everything that would follow. The relationship shattered completely in late 1996. Woods declined an invitation to Norman’s own tournament, the Shark Shootout, choosing instead to make his professional debut in Australia at the Australian Open. It was Norman’s home turf and the tournament became a clash of narratives. Norman dominated. He captured his fifth Australian Open title while Woods, battling a cold and struggling with the conditions, shot 79 in the opening round before recovering to finish tied for fifth. It was in victory that Norman delivered the comments that would poison everything between them. Speaking to reporters, Norman offered what he thought was helpful context. We play very difficult courses here, he said. He got a shock when he shot 79. Perhaps he will appreciate why Australians play so well when they leave home. Norman was simply explaining the conditions, putting Woods’s debut into perspective, as any veteran might, but Woods heard something else entirely. To a competitor with fierce pride and singular ambition, the comments felt like public condescension, a king putting a potential usurper in his place. Norman’s response revealed his charismatic nature. He used the media to build his brand and assert his position. Wood’s response was different. He said nothing, not a word. This wasn’t weakness. It was strategy. By refusing to engage, Woods denied Norman the legitimacy that a public relationship or even a public feud would have provided. The silence began and it would echo for the next 25 years. They became neighbors on Jupiter Island. their oceanfront mansions less than a mile apart, but they existed in separate universes. Norman tried to bridge the gap repeatedly. He wrote multiple congratulatory notes to Woods over the years, gestures that were never acknowledged. Whether he crumpled them up, whether he got them at all, whether somebody in Tiger’s camp interfered with my efforts, I don’t know, Norman later said. The most heartbreaking attempt came in April 2019 after Woods’s historic master’s comeback. Moved by the moment, Norman penned a handwritten note and personally drove it to the guard gate at Woods’s home. I wrote him a handwritten note and drove down my road, maybe a quarter of a mile, and handd delivered it to his guard at his gate, Norman recalled. Well, I never heard a word back from the guy. Weeks and months passed in silence. To Norman, this confirmed his worst suspicions. I don’t know. Maybe Tiger just dislikes me, he concluded. I have no idea. There was one brief thaw in early 2020 when they had what Norman described as their only meaningful conversation ever at Metalist Golf Club, a club Norman co-founded. They spoke of family, of playing in father-son tournaments, of the state of the game. Norman felt a softness to the interaction and hoped for a fresh start, but it didn’t evolve after that. The private Cold War finally erupted into open conflict with the emergence of Lev Golf. When Norman was appointed CEO of LiveGolf Investments in 2021, the battle lines were drawn. Norman became the charismatic revolutionary leading a challenge against the PGA Tour establishment. Woods in turn became the ultimate insider, the powerful guardian defending the institution where he built his legacy. Woods’s loyalty to the tour was absolute. He reportedly turned down an offer from Lib worth7 to $800 million, a figure Norman himself confirmed. More than just rejecting the money, Woods became the tour’s most powerful advocate, rallying players and spearheading changes to combat the LB threat. The confrontation became direct and public in late 2022. First Rory Mroy, Woods’s close ally. Then Woods himself laid down a stark ultimatum. For any negotiation between the rival tours to occur, Greg Norman had to go. Speaking at his Hero World Challenge tournament, Woods was unequivocal. “I think Greg has to go, first of all,” he stated, citing Norman’s long-held animosity toward the tour itself as the primary obstacle to peace. After decades of strategic silence, Woods finally acknowledged Norman on a global stage, but only to publicly declare him illegitimate and demand his exile. Norman’s response was swift. He fired back, calling Woods’s comments sad and claiming the 15time major winner doesn’t know the facts. Then he delivered the line that captured his view of the power dynamic, labeling Woods a bit of a mouthpiece for the PGA tour. Their personal feud had finally found a cause larger than themselves. The quiet chill of Jupiter Island had given way to a global firestorm that split professional golf in two. This 30-year saga represents more than a simple rivalry. It’s a collision of two eras, two philosophies of greatness. Norman represented the old guard, the charismatic global ambassador who believed in ceremonial respect between generations. Woods represented something new and colder, a model of professionalism defined by singular focus on victory above all else. Their story is a powerful lesson in how silence can be louder than words and how a quiet slight can evolve into a roar that reshapes an entire sport. Norman’s legacy isn’t just as a legendary player shadowed by heartbreak, but as a bold revolutionary whose challenge to the status quo has forever changed professional golf. What are your thoughts on this legendary feud? Let us know in the comments below. If you enjoyed this deep dive, don’t forget to like this video and subscribe for more stories from the world of sports. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you in the next one.

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They don’t talk. For over twenty years, two golf legends lived less than a mile apart on Florida’s exclusive Jupiter Island, but never exchanged a single word. Now, at seventy years old, Greg Norman has finally confirmed the rumors about his bitter feud with Tiger Woods. And Tiger’s ultimatum is crystal clear: for there to be peace in the golf world, Greg has to go.

5 Comments

  1. An absolute despicable excuse of a man. He was a choker. Also thought he was bigger than the game, you don’t command respect, you earn it. Tiger had more sense than we give him credit for. Chose your friends carefully Tiger, on that count you made a good choice.

  2. Notice that they build a narrative like Tiger is doing something wrong……

    Remember he comes from a different experience ….he delt with a lot of racism as a young player….one of his heroes, Nicklaus, said, when asked why not more Black athletes do well in golf, that Black Guys "have different muscles that react in different ways"……..not overtly racist….but ignorant racism……Black Golfers adored Nicklaus and this hurt.

    Imagine when Curtis Strange smuggly acted like Tiger was dilusional when he said he comes to every tournament to win.

    Remember when Tiger was expected to defend Fuzzy Zoeller who when asked about Master dinner said…."Tiger should not serve fried chicken or collard greens …of whatever the hell THEY serve"

    Again….is Fuzzy a racist….probably not…but his comments are racist….it was they last part that was the problem for Blacks…."whatever the hell THEY serve".

    Almost 70% of Whites have no regular involvement with Blacks so have an ignorant view of Blacks.

    We do not know what happened between Tiger and Norman…..we do know that Normam is, was, a major part of LIV introduction and start up…..what does that say, I don't know but some suggest ig being Character issue.

    So the narrative about Tiger has always been unfair.

    I would see Craig "Walrus" Stadler do horrible things, and have horrible behavior on the course but they would pick out instances when Tiger curses because they follow him constantly.

    I have been to numerous tournaments and golfers curse all the time….just like us amateurs.

    I saw Davis Love smash his club into the ground near the green and break a sprinkler head spraying water all over the green uncontrollably.

    Instantly the announcers claimed he was sorry and that is not his nature….I saw him at a tournament live bang a club infrustration……normal emotion to me…..but when Tiger does it is described as Tiger antics.

    People would speak about his cheating but anyone who knows golf and have been to tournaments knows the many women walking the course wirh stilletos and tight dresses…..of course they are not there to see great approaches….just to have one and lock in a husband.

    So Tiger did not bring him into his circle……why is that a big deal?

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