Woods’ tooth knocked out by video camera

Tiger Woods has another reason not to like cameras – his agent said it cost him a tooth.

Woods made a surprise visit to Italy on Monday to watch girlfriend Lindsey Vonn capture her record 63rd World Cup race. The photo that generated all the buzz was Woods missing his front tooth.

The culprit, according to his agent, was a camera.

“During a crush of photographers at the awards podium at the World Cup event in Italy, a media member with a shoulder-mounted video camera pushed towards the stage, turned and hit Woods in the mouth,” Mark Steinberg of Excel Sports said in an email. “Woods’ tooth was knocked out by the incident.”

Race organisers said this was not reported to them. They added Woods did request extra security and a snowmobile to exit the finish area, and they met both requests.

“I was among those who escorted him from the tent to the snowmobile and there was no such incident,” Nicola Colli, secretary general of the race organising committee, told AP. “When he arrived, he asked for more security and we rounded up police to look after both him and Lindsey.”

Woods had been wearing a scarf with a skeleton pattern over the lower part of his face, sunglasses and a stocking cap. The photo was taken when the scarf was lowered.

He first showed up in the athletes’ area when Vonn’s father, Alan Kildow, escorted him in shortly after she took the lead. The golfer then surprised Vonn and gave the skier a hug.

After 10 to 15 minutes of standing near Vonn with her family, Woods was shown into a white tent usually reserved for measuring skis. He stayed there for nearly an hour while the last lower-ranked skiers came down and during the podium celebration and later accompanied by police to a snowmobile and taken away.

Steinberg was travelling and did not say when Woods would have the tooth replaced. Golf’s biggest – and most photographed – star returns to competition next week in the Phoenix Open, and his smile is sure to produce a stream of shutters from the cameras.

Woods has a long history with cameras, often frustrated when shutters go off in the middle of his swing. One notable episode came during the Skins Game in 2002 when a corporate photographer clicked his camera as Woods was hitting a shot from the bunker on the final hole. Former caddie Steve Williams took the camera and set it on a steep bank of a pond so that it tumbled into the water.

Another time, Woods was on the verge of his first bogey-free tournament at a World Golf Championship in Ireland when a camera clicked at the top of his tee shot. He made bogey, but still won.

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