Sports

Gary Woodland Masters Security: Golfer battles PTSD after brain surgery

Gary Woodland Masters Security update: the major champion says he is battling PTSD every day after 2023 brain surgery.

Gary Woodland, amid PTSD battle, set to play Masters
Gary Woodland, amid PTSD battle, set to play Masters

says he is battling every day with post-traumatic stress disorder, nearly a year after doctors diagnosed the condition following surgery in 2023 to remove part of a brain tumour. The major champion said the struggle has become part of his daily life.

Woodland was diagnosed about a year ago, and he linked the condition to the operation he had in 2023. He described himself as “battling every day,” a stark line that frames how long the aftermath of that surgery has lasted and how closely the mental health fight remains tied to it.

That makes this more than a passing health update. Woodland is a major champion, and his case shows how a serious physical illness can leave a psychological mark long after the operation is over. The diagnosis also came only about a year ago, underscoring how recently he has been dealing with the condition even though the surgery happened in 2023.

The friction in Woodland’s story is simple and hard to ignore: the surgery was meant to address one health crisis, but the recovery has brought another. He has not described a clean break from that period. Instead, he says the battle continues each day, which is the part that matters now and the part that is hardest to measure from the outside.

For Woodland, the next chapter is not about a single result or a date on the calendar. It is about how he manages a condition that was only identified about a year ago and is still shaping his life after brain surgery. The most revealing detail is also the plainest one: he is still fighting it, every day.

Share this article Tweet Facebook
Xom Stock Rallies 60% as ExxonMobil Eyes More Growth Through 2030
Read Next →