Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

Some PR advice for Tiger Woods

Image - Batimore Sun

Unless you have been in a coma for the past four months, you are aware of Tiger Woods PR issue. If you have been in a coma (my apologies), live under a rock or are just out of it, please click here before continuing reading this post. As you may have heard, the world’s top golfer will break his silence and issue statements to a group of assembled media on Friday. While the speculation on what will be said, when he’ll return to golf and if there will be an apology will run rampant, there will be no Q&A so some may be left with a sense of emptiness. As a PR pro, I would like to offer some free advice to Tiger to help get his image rebuilding start on the right foot.

Don’t lie – While the situation may look bleak, it could be a lot worse. Treat your flack like you would treat a lawyer. Tell them the whole truth; if you feel like omitting things, I’d like to offer Roger Clemens and Mark McGwire as examples of why you should not leave any reasonable doubt in the mind of the public. This will also help your team run a tight ship in repairing your image.

Air your laundry – Now this piece of advice may sting a little, so please have a seat. While the public may know about your infidelity, it is important to let your flack know about any lingering bad news that may leak out. Now the approach can be done one of two ways. The first is to admit to everything that you have done – everything. It is risky, but it puts the kibosh on any more skeletons from coming out of the closet. The second is the more conservative approach but could open you up to more prying down the road. It is to simply tell your flack everything and have them on the ready to disprove everything that newly emerged sources have to say when they do emerge.

Personally I would air it all, it shows that you are human and will also gain some sympathy from the public. You’ve already gotten out of rehab for your sexual addiction so you are on the road to recovery already. It could also help make the sponsors less edgy around you.

All eyes on you – Prior to Thanksgiving, you may have been able to avoid the public eye away from the links, everyone will be looking for dirt on you. That counts everyone from Golf Week scribes to TMZ hacks, so be ready for it. With that said, you can quell some of the intrigue by taking option #1 above and by also making one thing clear in your opening statement, you will field questions on your personal matters once and after that one time any question brought up will end your interview. While some folks may call your bluff on this, stick to it. You are golf so if they want to get your take on something, they are playing by your rules.

Play nice – Now don’t take this as saying to lay off your dominating game, but rather to open up to your fellow golfers. Let them know that you are sorry and show the human side of you. There are more of them than you, so getting them on board with rebuilding Tiger2.0 can help get the media in line with your no personal talk mantra.

Dominate – At the end of the day, there is one thing that will silence critics instantaneously – winning. So the sooner you get back on the course in your cold-calculated way, the better. When you are winning, the golf world is relevant and the folks in the PGA front office have mile wide smiles on their faces and fat wallets. So when you win everyone wins.

While this post may fall onto deaf ears, in the rare chance that TW or his agent sees this post – call me. Contact info is on the about page.

What would you do if you were Tiger’s flack is there any advice that you’d offer him?

9 Responses to Some PR advice for Tiger Woods
  1. uberVU - social comments
    February 18, 2010 | 6:43 am

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by jeffespo: Some PR advice for Tiger Woods http://goo.gl/fb/d0to [new post]…

  2. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:10 am

    I agree and I wish he would have done most of this before this so called presser. He knows the golf season is close to starting and this will be the ONLY way he can back into the game. Plus, announcing it when the world has their eyes on the Olympics only helps his cause.

  3. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 12:30 pm

    I disagree, golf needs him. Reason being is that revenues increased since the time he started and is the face of golf. While I would have liked to see more from him prior to this, he owes us nothing. He is a pro athlete paid to play the game, granted he has media obligations, and will do all of them, but he can keep it focused on golf like he did previously.

    The media's tune will change once he wins his first tournament or is in the hunt

  4. Alex Aizenberg
    February 18, 2010 | 1:37 pm

    Very important point within this… some key advice for anyone, let alone Tiger. I think key point of “all eyes on you” rings true for everybody nowadays, in the public eye or not. Whether through social media (or citizen journalism), or frankly the reality that Enquirer may win a Pulitzer for upping their reporting (Thank you John Edwards) means that everyone will keep you on your toes… privacy, is no longer an option, not for the celebs, and not for the masses.

    All in all, my 2 cents is that i want him to play i need him to play (I already only watch the final rounds only even when he is playing)… i don't care about his 'sex addiction' or his personal matters, but the reality is (as you say) good playing brings wide smiles… and people forget things when they are happy.

    Great post Jeff, always a pleasure!

  5. mikeschaffer
    February 18, 2010 | 1:44 pm

    Excellent advice, Jeff! Tiger has relished his privacy over the last 15 years of his professional career. Even when he was winning every week, he was able to keep his off-course life in the dark.

    Right or wrong, his world has changed. It's not that what he did was so horrendous. It's a sad fact that too many marriages have infidelity, meaning Tiger is not alone in cheating on his wife. It's the fact that TIGER F'N WOODS, the paragon of virtue, cheated on his wife.

    Yes, we hold athletes up and wait for them to fall, but it seemed to be different with Tiger. He was a national treasure and he showed a major flaw.

    The fantastic sports writer John Feinstein has called for golf writers to boycott this event. Without answering questions, this is a glorified press release.

  6. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:46 pm

    Thanks Alex, is there really golf when he isn't playing? No one tunes in for a bunch of old white dudes hitting some balls.

    The all eyes on me thing can work two-fold. With the way SM is for companies and TMZ invading sports as well as hounding celebrities. So you really need to keep up the pro face.

  7. jeffespo
    February 18, 2010 | 1:52 pm

    I agree completely with that. Man I miss John and his wittiness. You don't by chance happen to have his email address do you? Not a stalker I helped w/ Next Man Up, and wanted to touch base given his recent issues.

    The glorified press release can go two ways. If he goes the route I anticipate, his life will be much like Clemens. The way I want to see would be to tell all and leave with one of his patented stares saying its time to golf.

  8. Jamie Favreau
    February 18, 2010 | 10:56 pm

    I didn't say golf didn't need him. I meant that during the off season he wasn't in the spotlight as much as he would be if the season were going full swing. So he backs out of it and tries to get his stuff together when the season isn't going on as strong and then comes back when it is time to play.

  9. jeffespo
    February 19, 2010 | 12:28 am

    Ahh I thought you were saying that this was the only way that he could get back into the game

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