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'It depends on you all' - Tiger Woods wanted to play Masters after car crash

Footage shows Tiger Woods sitting in the back of a police vehicle following his arrest in Florida
Tiger Woods was arrested following the crash

Tiger Woods told first responders to his 27 March rollover crash that he hoped to play in the Masters, per multiple reports citing body camera footage released by the Martin County, Florida Sheriff's Office.

As responders retrieved his golf clubs from the back of his Land Rover while it was lying on its side after the accident, an investigator asked Woods, "Are you golfing in the Masters this year?"

Woods responded, "Hoping to. It depends on you all."

His answer drew laughter from multiple people, with one voice heard saying, "It don't depend on me."

Just three days before the crash, Woods said he would "keep trying" to get himself ready for the Masters, which starts 9 April.

Speaking after playing his first TGL match of the season, Woods said of the season's first major, "I want to play. I love the tournament."

Woods contends that he was looking at his phone and changing the radio station when his Land Rover clipped the back of a truck and rolled onto its side on Jupiter Island.

Tiger Woods is seen leaving Martin County Jail after being arrested for driving under the influence after a car crash on March 27, 2026 in Stuart, Florida. (Photo by MEGA/GC Images)
Tiger Woods pictured leaving the police station after his arrest

The release of the bodycam footage came one day after Woods was granted a request by a Florida judge to leave the United States to enter a comprehensive inpatient treatment facility as he faces misdemeanor driving under the influence charges.

Martin County Judge Darren Steele granted the motion to travel submitted by Woods' attorney, Douglas Duncan, who cited the 50-year-old golf superstar's need for an "intensive, highly individualized and medically integrated program" away from media and public scrutiny.

Woods released a public statement on Tuesday and entered a plea of not guilty in a Florida court to charges of misdemeanor driving under the influence with property damage.

The arrest affidavit stated a breathalyser test showed no signs of alcohol, but that Woods refused a urinalysis test for other drugs.

The affidavit stated Woods was "sweating profusely," his movements were "lethargic and slow," his eyes were "bloodshot and glassy," his pupils were "extremely dilated" and that during the field sobriety exercises, Woods was "limping and stumbling to the right."

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