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Tiger Woods’ most lopsided victories

Tiger Woods’ most lopsided victories in his career as a professional.

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In the biggest beatdown of a field in his career, Woods finished 12 under at Pebble Beach. Ernie Els and Miguel Angel Jimenez tied for the B Flight lead at 3 over. (David Cannon /Allsport)

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2002 major champions Rich Beem, Justin Leonard and Davis Love were Woods’ opponents in this annual unofficial event. Woods won with 66-61. (Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

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Woods made sure his first major win was memorable, torching Augusta National to the tune of 18 under. Tom Kite was his closest pursuer. (Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

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In his fourth consecutive win at Bay Hill, Woods was 19 under, easily outdistancing Brad Faxon, Kenny Perry, Kirk Triplett and Stewart Cink. (Craig Jones/Getty Images)

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Woods shot a second-round 61 en route to setting the tournament record for aggregate score (259) and score to par (-21). Philip Price and Justion Leonard tied for second. (PGA Tour Photo Services/PGA)

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World’s greatest trivia question: Who finished second in Woods’ first double-digit win as a pro? Answer: Mo Joong-Kyung. (Peter Charlesworth/LightRocket via Getty Images)

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Golf Channel’s own Frank Nobilo was the little-remembered runner-up to Woods in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Woods also won the team title with Mark O’Meara. (David Cannon /Allsport)

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Jim Furyk and Marc Leishman were the runners-up to Woods in his second BMW Championship win. (Scott Halleran/Getty Images)

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Woods won the sixth of his titles in what is now known as the Farmers Insurance Open. Ryuji Imada was second. (Robert Beck/Sports Illustrated/Getty Images)

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Woods shot 8-under 272 to win his sixth tournament at Firestone, beating Rory Sabbatini and Justin Rose by eight. (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

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Woods easily won the 2007 Tour Championship in the first year that it was the finale of the FedEx Cup playoffs. (Fred Vuich/Sports Illustrated/Getty Images)

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Woods shot a record score of 261 in England to capture his fifth WGC-American Express Championship. Ian Poulter and Adam Scott were second. (Glenn Campbell/AFP/Getty Images)

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Woods dusted Ryoken Kawagishi by 8 shots in this Japan Tour event. He dusted everyone else in the field worse. (Jun Sato/WireImage)

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Woods broke 70 in all four rounds to cruise at St. Andrews. Ernie Els and Thomas Bjorn shared a distant second place. (David Cannon/ALLSPORT)

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Woods won for the eighth time at Firestone, threatening to shoot 59 (but settling for 61) in the second round. Keegan Bradley and Henrik Stenson were second. (Sam Greenwood/Getty Images)

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Hosting his own 16-player tournament, Woods won with a record-tying 22-under score. Zach Johnson was second. (Jonathan Alcorn/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

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Playing against Michael Campbell, Phil Mickelson and Vijay Singh, Woods cruised again in Hawaii. Mickelson was a distant second. (Donald Miralle/Getty Images)

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Woods trailed Paul Azinger by a shot entering the final round but shot 66 to Zinger’s 74 to beat Azinger and Sergio garcia by 7 shots. (Andy Lyons /Allsport)