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DIVORCE

Woods seeks to rekindle career after divorce

US golfer Tiger Woods will compete at the Barclays this week, his first tournament since finalising his divorce from Swedish ex-wife Elin Nordegren in a bid to determine his stature on the PGA Tour's playoffs.

Woods seeks to rekindle career after divorce

Now that he has resolved his troubled marriage by signing the divorce papers with Nordegren, the golfer’s focus is on breaking the downward spiral that has left his golf game in disarray.

Since his return to competitive golf four months ago at The Masters following a blistering sex scandal, Woods has not come close to winning a tournament.

Not only does he have his sights set on making headway in the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup playoffs, he is also trying to earn his way onto the American Ryder Cup team.

Even if he makes the US Ryder Cup team, there are some that think it could become a distraction, especially since the wives and girlfriends seem to have taken on a bigger role in the social aspect of the event.

“Turning up at Celtic Manor could be one of the hardest things Tiger ever does,” European Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomery wrote in a newspaper column several months ago.

“He will worry about how the wives of the other players will react to him. Some of them will be friends with Elin and they will sympathize with her anger and pain. Some of them might find it hard to welcome Tiger back into the group,” he added.

Woods’ debacle at the Bridgestone Invitational earlier this month is still fresh in his mind. In what turned out to be the worst performance of his career, Woods finished second last in a tie for 78th. Woods, who had won the event seven times previously, shot 18 over par and finished an embarrassing 30 shots behind winner Hunter Mahan.

This week’s tournament in New Jersey will be his 10th this season. He hasn’t come close to winning the previous nine events this year with his best finishes being a tie for fourth at the US Open and The Masters.

He missed the cut at the Quail Hollow Championships and although he showed flashes of his old self at the PGA Championship’s this month, Woods failed to put four strong rounds together and could only muster a tie for 28th.

That’s a far cry from what people are used to seeing from Woods. He has won 14 major championships, including a half dozen during the nearly six years of marriage to the former Swedish model.

His last victory was in Australia in November, two weeks before he smashed his car into a tree and a fire hydrant outside his luxury Florida home, sparking a series of scandalous revelations that he cheated on his wife with a multitude of different women including a porn star, a cocktail waitress and a Las Vegas club manager.

Woods tried unsuccessfully to save his marriage and court documents released on Tuesday showed that golf and divorce proceedings have gone hand in hand.

The couple said in a statement through their lawyers Tuesday that they plan to “share parenting” and promised to work together for their children’s happiness. As part of the divorce proceedings, they were both ordered to take parenting classes.

Less than 24 hours before he flew off to play in the British Open, Woods completed a four-hour course in parenting and was awarded a diploma by the American Safety Institute. The two-time British Open winner finished in a tie for 23rd, 13 strokes behind the winner Louis Oosthuizen of South Africa.

Nordegren completed her four-hour parenting programme eight days ago and one day after Woods finished out of the running at the PGA Championship.

On July 4th, Woods and Nordegren signed their marital settlement papers. It was the same weekend Woods took part in the AT&T National, where he failed to break par in a USPGA Tour event for the first time in over a decade.

All this of course is bad news for Woods’ legacy and the sport, which is struggling to maintain sponsorship and hold onto marketing deals in a poor economy. The players, while saying they eventually want to see the old Woods back, say there may be a silver lining in all this.

“There’s a lot of different guys that’s won this year, and there’s only a few multiple winners,” golfer Dustin Johnson said Tuesday at The Barclays. “And so there’s a lot of guys that have played solid all year.”

Woods had posted a statement on his website Monday from him and Nordegren confirming the divorce, but the story had been removed by Tuesday and replaced with an article saying the website had won several awards.

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SEX

France taken to European Court over divorce ruling that woman had ‘marital duty’ to have sex with husband

A case has been brought against France at the European Court of Human Rights by a woman who lost a divorce case after judges ruled against her because she refused to have sex with her husband.

France taken to European Court over divorce ruling that woman had 'marital duty' to have sex with husband
Photo: Frederick Florin/AFP

The woman, who has not been named, has brought the case with the backing of two French feminist groups, arguing that the French court ruling contravened human rights legislation by “interference in private life” and “violation of physical integrity”.

It comes after a ruling in the Appeals Court in Versailles which pronounced a fault divorce in 2019 because of her refusal to have sex with her husband.

READ ALSO The divorce laws in France that foreigners need to be aware of

The court ruled that the facts of the case “established by the admission of the wife, constitute a serious and renewed violation of the duties and obligations of marriage making intolerable the maintenance of a shared life”.

Feminist groups Fondation des femmes (Women’s Foundation) and Collectif fĂ©ministe contre le viol (Feminist Collective against Rape) have backed her appeal, deploring the fact that French justice “continues to impose the marital duty” and “thus denying the right of women to consent or not to sexual relations”.

“Marriage is not and should not be a sexual servitude,” the joint statement says, pointing out that in 47 percent of the 94,000 recorded rapes and attempted rapes per year, the aggressor is the spouse or ex-spouse of the victim.

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