‘F***’s he doing?’ – Tiger Woods’ leaves Man Utd legend baffled as he appears to perform pre-putting jig at Masters

3 weeks ago 24

MANCHESTER UNITED legend Paul Scholes was left raging as he watched the Masters yesterday.

The United legend documented his watching experience on his Instagram and that saw Tiger Woods become the target of his ire.

Instagram
Scholes videod his TV and was confused by Woods’ jig[/caption]
Instagram
Woods’ long list of injuries has seen him implement the jig[/caption]
Alamy
Scholes had no times for Tiger’s antics[/caption]

Scholes raged and wrote: “F**** he doing?” in response to Woods’ pre-putting exercises.

The method, which has been compared by some fans to a jig, sees Woods loosen up his shoulders before dropping into something of a squat.

The jig aids Woods’ rehabilitation after the multiple injuries he has suffered throughout the years which has included four back surgeries and knee injuries.

Woods is not the only person that has caught the ire of Scholes on Instagram of late.

He posted a screen grab of Kobbie Mainoo and Alejandro Garnacho to his story and criticised the players for wearing hoods at training.

He wrote: “Don’t mind hats and gloves but no way can you train properly with your hood up.

“Standards begin on the training pitch… bye!”

The post was later deleted.

CASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO WELCOME OFFERS

Woods meanwhile has shown he’s still got it at the age of 48.

He made the cut for Day three of the Masters for a record 24th time in a row.

And he had to do it the hard way, after a SANDSTORM interrupted his 18th hole.

After making the cut, Woods said: “I’ve given myself the right to be involved in what happens next, and I have a chance to win the golf tournament.

“I don’t think anyone is going to run off with this tournament. It’s all pretty bunched below the top few guys, and there’s a heck of a lot of golf left to be played.

“As for the cut record, it means a lot, because it is a testament to consistency.

“To do this year after year, through injuries and everything else, is pretty difficult.”

Read Entire Article