Yep Tiger's caddie is telling all about Tiger. He's giving away his word that he didn't know what Tiger was up to. Sorry we here at TWR don't buy it. How can you be that close to the man when he's on tour and simply not know that he was tracking a pack of hussies behind his wife and kids? I mean, really? Apparently some of these chicks even followed him on parts of the tours...And you didn't know Mr. Caddie?




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Tiger Woods's caddie, Steve Williams, put an end to any lingering friendship between the world No1 and Phil Mickelson with a withering assessment of Woods's compatriot and one-time Ryder Cup partner.
Williams, back home in New Zealand while his employer recovers from knee surgery, was asked for his opinion of Mickelson's golfing abilities. "I wouldn't call Mickelson a great player 'cause I hate the prick," he responded. Williams is an infamously brusque individual who once threw a spectator's camera into a pond but even by his standards this was an astonishing thing to say. And to make matters worse he then told a story about this year's US Open at Torrey Pines, where Woods and Mickelson were paired together.
The two players were walking down the 17th fairway when, according to Williams, someone shouted "Phil" in Mickelson's direction. The world No2 did not respond until the fan shouted "Hey, Mr Mickelson". When Mickelson turned and waved, the fan yelled out "Nice tits". The crowd erupted in laughter; Mickelson went double bogey, bogey and his chances of winning the tournament disappeared.
As golfing heckles go, this one is almost as old as the mashie niblick but it is safe to assume Mickelson will not appreciate having it aired in public by Woods' bag carrier. Williams' comments confirm that these are troubled times for those who peddle the image of golf as the most gentlemanly of sports, coming just days after Padraig Harrington revealed the extent of his enmity with Sergio Garcia — "We have nothing in common except golf."
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One voice noticeably absent in the melee surrounding Tiger Woods and his alleged affairs has been that of his caddy, Steve Williams — until now. The New Zealand native opened up to his country’s Sunday News, saying the golf icon had admitted to him that he had “a problem,” telling the paper, “My head is in a spin right now, mate.”
Steve broke his silence after the media’s continual questions over whether he’d remain as Tiger’s caddy and whether he was party to Tiger’s alleged affairs. One article by ESPN The Magazine’s Rick Reilly called for Tiger to “clean house” and fire those who work for him if he wants to save his marriage to Elin Nordegren, something Steve seems to take issue with.
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Steve Williams said in an interview broadcast by TVNZ that it was "very disappointing...to have been labelled a liar in the media".
"I don't have anything to do with what Tiger does off the course and whatever he does is his own business," he said.
An American sports writer said that the caddie must have known about Woods' alleged affairs and may even have helped arrange liaisons.
In a column for ESPN The Magazine, Rick Reilly wrote that Woods needs to "clean house - if he wants to keep his wife, he has to get a
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While Tiger Woods has apologized for his own “infidelity,” his longtime caddie is speaking out, defending himself against claims he had any knowledge of the golfer’s activities off the course.
“What people fail to realize is I [just] work for Tiger Woods,” caddie Steve Williams told New Zealand’s Sunday News. “I live in New Zealand, I travel to and from New Zealand to caddie for Tiger Woods. I am not with him 24/7. [While] I am a very good friend of his… I don’t know what he does off the course. Some nights we go to dinner. His indiscretions have probably been [when he wasn’t playing]… When he is not competing, I am back in New Zealand. I have no knowledge of what he is doing.”
Williams’ statements came on the heels of a column by ESPN’s Rick Reilly, who suggested the caddie was part of a group who Woods would need to cut ties with if he wanted to save his marriage to Elin Nordegren.
”[Woods] needs to clean house,” Reilly wrote. “If he wants to keep his wife, he has to get a new agent, a new caddie and some new friends… It’s hard to believe all this went on without their help or knowledge.”
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LOS ANGELES, Calif. --
While Tiger Woods has apologized for his own “infidelity,” his longtime caddie is speaking out, defending himself against claims he had any knowledge of the golfer’s activities off the course.
“What people fail to realize is I [just] work for Tiger Woods,” caddie Steve Williams told New Zealand’s Sunday News. “I live in New Zealand, I travel to and from New Zealand to caddie for Tiger Woods. I am not with him 24/7. [While] I am a very good friend of his… I don’t know what he does off the course. Some nights we go to dinner. His indiscretions have probably been [when he wasn’t playing]… When he is not competing, I am back in New Zealand. I have no knowledge of what he is doing.”
Williams’ statements came on the heels of a column by ESPN’s Rick Reilly, who suggested the caddie was part of a group who Woods would need to cut ties with if he wanted to save his marriage to Elin Nordegren.
”[Woods] needs to clean house,” Reilly wrote. “If he wants to keep his wife, he has to get a new agent, a new caddie and some new friends… It’s hard to believe all this went on without their help or knowledge.”
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He may be Tiger Woods's closest advisor on the golf course, but Steve Williams, the champion golfer's caddie, pal and man Friday, says he knows squat about last month's car crash or the sportsman's alleged affairs.

"I do not have any personal knowledge of anything in the reports related to the Tiger Woods stories. [My wife] Kirsty and I give our heartfelt wishes to Tiger, Elin, Sam and Charlie and hope this gets put to rest soon," New Zealander Williams said in a statement released to the New Zealand Herald.

So far, Woods's major corporate partners are staying mum as well – insiders say there's little chance his $100 million-plus Nike endorsement is in jeopardy, despite his plummeting popularity. 

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Steve Williams, the caddie for Tiger Woods, spoke out about the golfer's alleged affairs yesterday. Williams claims to have no knowledge of Woods' infidelity and struck back at those who have speculated that he must have known about the alleged affairs. "To have been labeled a liar in the media is very disappointing to me," Williams said, adding that it "really made me sick."
Addressing his boss's infidelity, Williams said Woods has "obviously got something to work out. I just hope for everybody's sake that him and his family -- his lovely wife Elin -- can repair the damage and get back together. They're a great family and they're very close to me and my wife." Watch the full interview below.