Schools in, despite Tigers many woes

1/31/2010  
- News

Outside the Tiger Woods Learning Center, visitors are welcomed with a message etched in concrete and another time.

"Tiger," it says, "thank you for being an adult role model."

Inside, past a huge bronze sculpture of Woods and his father in the lobby, eager fifth-graders wielding scalpels and tweezers are busy dissecting squid. In another classroom, they're studying marine science.

Every week brings busloads of kids to the sparkling, new center just a few good Tiger tee shots from Disneyland. The center's mission is to help them think about how different classes - which tilt toward math, science and technology - can lead to a career they'd like.

For the time being, it's business as usual at the 35,000-square foot center, set next to a municipal golf course in a working-class neighborhood. The fallout from the scandal that brought down the school's benefactor hasn't intruded, so far, at a place where Woods always believed he did his best work.

Greg McLaughlin, head of the Tiger Woods Foundation, says the center has enough financial support to carry on while Woods is on hiatus from golf.

The future is a bit more unsettled, if only because everything about Woods right now is unsettled. But if McLaughlin is worried, he doesn't show it.

"We feel pretty confident we're in a good place right now," he said. "We have a pretty strong financial position which is a tribute to our fundraising efforts, and I think that will sustain us during Tiger's indefinite leave."

While every new day seems to bring a new sighting of Woods and paparazzi scramble to get pictures of him and his family, things are decidedly more quiet at 1 Tiger Woods Way, where life inside his learning center goes on just as it has the last few years.

Fifth-graders arrive every morning by bus for their weeklong stay. They seem more interested in trying to build a rocket or filming a video than they do in the personal life of the man who made the place possible.

"They haven't made any comment about it at all," school director Katherine Bihr said.

---=

Woods always seemed destined to become a towering figure in sports, from the time he appeared on national television as a 2-year-old with a cut-down golf club to the time he became the first African-American to win the Masters. With plenty of guidance from his father, Earl, he was equally determined to create a legacy away from the golf course.

Father and son created the Tiger Woods Foundation when he turned pro in 1996, and for years it was a constant reminder to Woods that he was making a difference in the lives of kids who wouldn't know the difference between a 9-iron and a putter.

Woods, by most accounts, hasn't reached out to many people since going into seclusion. But one of the calls he did make was to assure the foundation he was not on a permanent leave of absence.

"He specifically wanted to talk about the foundation and his dedication and commitment to the kids we served," McLaughlin said. "I conveyed that to all the staff and board members."

Just as important were the calls from donors and sponsors. Like Tiger, they weren't bailing, either.

"To the contrary, we're actually pleased all of our partners are extremely supportive of our work," McLaughlin said. "I can't speculate what might happen in the future, but our partners know the quality of our work."

How long the Tiger Woods Foundation can continue to fund the learning center and its other programs at current levels may depend on how long it takes Woods to rehabilitate his image. Though the foundation has millions in the bank, its fortunes largely revolve around that of the golfer who started it 14 years ago.

In addition, the foundation likely will have to spend millions on a second learning center in Washington that still doesn't have a site more than two years after it was announced.

Until now, much of the foundation's money came from events Woods is connected with, including his own tournament every December near Los Angeles. Chevron signed on as the title sponsor in 2008, declaring it a partnership born of "shared ideals and commitments."






Every week brings busloads of kids to the sparkling, new center just a few good Tiger tee shots from Disneyland. The center's mission is to help them think about how different classes - which tilt toward math, science and technology - can lead to a career they'd like.

For the time being, it's business as usual at the 35,000-square foot center, set next to a municipal golf course in a working-class neighborhood. The fallout from the scandal that brought down the school's benefactor hasn't intruded, so far, at a place where Woods always believed he did his best work.

Greg McLaughlin, head of the Tiger Woods Foundation, says the center has enough financial support to carry on while Woods is on hiatus from golf.

The future is a bit more unsettled, if only because everything about Woods right now is unsettled. But if McLaughlin is worried, he doesn't show it.

"We feel pretty confident we're in a good place right now," he said. "We have a pretty strong financial position which is a tribute to our fundraising efforts, and I think that will sustain us during Tiger's indefinite leave."

While every new day seems to bring a new sighting of Woods and paparazzi scramble to get pictures of him and his family, things are decidedly more quiet at 1 Tiger Woods Way, where life inside his learning center goes on just as it has the last few years.

Fifth-graders arrive every morning by bus for their weeklong stay. They seem more interested in trying to build a rocket or filming a video than they do in the personal life of the man who made the place possible.

"They haven't made any comment about it at all," school director Katherine Bihr said.

---=

Woods always seemed destined to become a towering figure in sports, from the time he appeared on national television as a 2-year-old with a cut-down golf club to the time he became the first African-American to win the Masters. With plenty of guidance from his father, Earl, he was equally determined to create a legacy away from the golf course.

Father and son created the Tiger Woods Foundation when he turned pro in 1996, and for years it was a constant reminder to Woods that he was making a difference in the lives of kids who wouldn't know the difference between a 9-iron and a putter.

Woods, by most accounts, hasn't reached out to many people since going into seclusion. But one of the calls he did make was to assure the foundation he was not on a permanent leave of absence.

"He specifically wanted to talk about the foundation and his dedication and commitment to the kids we served," McLaughlin said. "I conveyed that to all the staff and board members."

Just as important were the calls from donors and sponsors. Like Tiger, they weren't bailing, either.

"To the contrary, we're actually pleased all of our partners are extremely supportive of our work," McLaughlin said. "I can't speculate what might happen in the future, but our partners know the quality of our work."

How long the Tiger Woods Foundation can continue to fund the learning center and its other programs at current levels may depend on how long it takes Woods to rehabilitate his image. Though the foundation has millions in the bank, its fortunes largely revolve around that of the golfer who started it 14 years ago.

In addition, the foundation likely will have to spend millions on a second learning center in Washington that still doesn't have a site more than two years after it was announced.

Until now, much of the foundation's money came from events Woods is connected with, including his own tournament every December near Los Angeles. Chevron signed on as the title sponsor in 2008, declaring it a partnership born of "shared ideals and commitments."

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