Tiger Woods Involved in Rollover Car Crash in Florida

2 weeks ago 13

Tiger Woods was involved in a car crash in Florida on March 27, according to authorities. One vehicle was a rollover, though no injuries were reported, a Martin County Fire Rescue source told WHAM.

Tiger Woods Involved in Rollover Car Crash in Florida

Tiger Woods is dealing with a scary incident. 

The 82-time PGA Tour winner was involved in a rollover car crash in Jupiter Island, Fla., March 27 around 2 p.m., the Martin County Sheriff’s Office told the Golf Channel.

However, no one was injured in the two-car accident, a source at Martin County Fire Rescue told WHAM. One person is in stable condition and another person refused to go to a local hospital, according to the local outlet.

E! News has reached out to Tiger's rep for comment but hasn't heard back.

This isn't the first time the 50-year-old has been involved a terrifying collision. In February 2021, he suffered serious leg injuries following a crash while driving to the Rolling Hills Country Club in Los Angeles to film with GOLFTV and Golf Digest.

At the time, he was traveling more than 40 miles per hour over the speed limit. According to a collision report obtained by E! News, Tiger was knocked unconscious during the accident and suffered injuries listed as "laceration to the lower front jaw, bruised right and left rib cage, fractured right tibia and fibula, possible right ankle injury."

Tiger (real name Eldrick Tont Woods) was hospitalized for his injuries at the time, with his TGR Foundation saying he underwent a "long surgical procedure on his lower right leg and ankle."

He then spent months working on his recovery.

"I've had some hard days and tough setbacks," he told Golf Digest in November of that year, "but I keep progressing and I'm able to walk again."

WPTV

Indeed, Tiger returned to the green the following year, competing at the 2022 Masters Golf Tournament. As for this year, the dad of Charlie Woods, 17, and Sam Woods, 18—with ex Elin Nordegren— has been on the fence as to whether he will compete at the Masters in April.

“I’ve been trying,” he said March 24. “This body just doesn’t recover like it did when I was 24 or 25. I want to play. I love the tournament. I love being there since I was 19 years old. I’m going to be there either way.”

James Gilbert/TGL/TGL Golf via Getty Images

For a closer look at Tiger’s career, read on.

(E! and the Golf Channel are both part of the Versant Media family.)

CBS via Getty Images

1978

Christina Salvador/Sygma/Sygma via Getty Images

1989

Ken Levine/Getty Images

1990

Per-Anders Pettersson./Corbis via Getty Images

1991

David Madison/Getty Images

1995

Sam Greenwood/PGA TOUR Archive

1997

JEFF HAYNES/AFP via Getty Images

2000

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2004

David Cannon/Getty Images

2006

ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images

2008

Lester Cohen/WireImage

2008

Eric Gay-Pool for Getty Images

2010

TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images

2010

Warren Little/Getty Images

2013

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

2014

AP Photo/Chris Carlson

2015

EPA/TANNEN MAURY/LANDOV

2015

ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP/Getty Images

2016

AP Photo/Chris Carlson

2019

Ben Jared/PGA TOUR via Getty Images

2020

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