I thought people were trying to kill me, says Gary Woodland

Gary Woodland was playing the back nine at the Houston Open a couple of weeks ago, an event he would ultimately win to secure his return trip to the Masters, when the former US Open champion began to feel what he described as “hypervigilant.”
“I battled the last 10 holes,” Woodland revealed Tuesday, “thinking people were trying to kill me.”
That’s not intended to be a joke. The exact opposite, in fact: a powerful admission of Woodland’s mental health struggles, and one he hopes will help others dealing with trauma, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder in their own lives.
The inner turmoil that Woodland feels even at Augusta National, one of the most bucolic places in the world, has its roots in a scan that uncovered a lesion on his brain that had been causing him unfounded fears of dying.
In September 2023, he wrote letters to his wife and kids in the event something went wrong, then had surgery to remove as much of it as possible.
The procedure involved cutting a baseball-sized hole from the side of his head, but it proved to be successful. Woodland was back on the course in January 2024, slowly working his way back into form, making enough cuts to keep him motivated.
The following year, he finished second at the Houston Open — the same tournament he would win last month, when Woodland got through his Friday bout of hypervigilance and closed with a 3-under 67 on Sunday for a five-shot win over Nicolai Hojgaard.
Few knew that Woodland was still struggling, though.










