‘The Tiger I know is a survivor and a fighter,’ Bill Paul weighs in on Tiger Woods
Longtime Canadian Open tournament director Bill Paul remembers the summer of 2000 well.
He learned in early July of that year that Tiger Woods — already a phenom just a few years into his pro career — was planning to play at the national championship that September at Glen Abbey.
“There were three people that knew and that was Tiger, (agent Mark) Steinberg and myself,” Paul recalled Wednesday. “I never told my wife, I didn’t tell anybody in my family. I didn’t tell any friends, I didn’t tell anybody.”
Having Woods in the field at the 1996 and ’97 editions of the tournament was one thing. Landing him in 2000 — fresh off three straight major titles — was something completely different.