"I don't think there's one clear-cut favorite," said Woods, who is vying to pull off a comeback that would rate among the greatest in sport.
He owns four Masters green jackets, but hasn't even teed it up in the stately confines of Augusta National in two years as back trouble threatened to end his career completely.
Pain free at last after spinal fusion surgery last April, Woods has ignited expectations with one runner-up finish and a tie for fifth in five official PGA Tour starts this year — his best finishes since 2015.
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Woods himself is at a loss to explain the impressive swing speed and driving distance he never expected to see after having vertebrae in his lower back fused.
"For some reason it has come back," he said. "All of a sudden I have this pop and my body and my speed's back and my timing."
He'll need all of that, and his vaunted short game and solid putting, on the course famed for the difficulty of its fast, undulating greens. "This golf course is something else," Woods said.
The course, however, isn't the only obstacle standing in Woods's way, and he knows it.
"I think there's so many guys playing well at the same time. I think that's what is making this year's Masters so exciting, that there's so many guys," Woods said.
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