The Moment
Retired golf pro and TV analyst Brandel Chamblee reportedly urged Tiger Woods to “consider not playing golf anymore” after a newly reported DUI arrest in Florida late last week. The comments were attributed to an interview segment on Golf Channel’s Golf Central.
According to entertainment reports citing law enforcement, Woods was arrested on Jupiter Island after a rollover crash. Those same reports say a breathalyzer test was negative but that officers noted alleged impairment, and that Woods refused a urinalysis, triggering potential charges of DUI with property damage and refusal to submit to testing. A representative for Woods had not issued a public statement as of the time of those reports.
Chamblee, who has long been candid about player health and performance, linked his broader concern to Woods’ history of injuries and multiple surgeries. He was careful to add that facts about this latest incident still need to play out.
The Take
I get the instinct to play dad here. Tiger’s body is a Greatest Hits album of orthopedic work, and the man has willed himself through more comebacks than a soap opera villain. But telling Tiger Woods to quit golf on the heels of a reported arrest, before police records and toxicology are public, risks skipping due process for a hot take.
There are two truths living in the same clubhouse. One: Chamblee’s point about long-term health isn’t wrong. If your body keeps setting off the check-engine light, the fairway can start to look like a liability. Two: Golf is Tiger’s oxygen. Asking him to retire right now is like telling a concert pianist to close the lid because the metronome glitched. Concern is humane; a career obituary is premature.

Also, the addiction innuendo around prescribed pain meds? That’s a live wire. Woods has publicly acknowledged past issues and treatment in prior incidents, but we don’t know what, if anything, was in his system this time. Until there’s a report, connecting any new dots is drawing with invisible ink.
Big picture, this moment isn’t just about one arrest headline. It’s about how we treat aging legends: do we safeguard them from themselves, or do we respect their right to keep writing the story, even messily, until they decide it’s the last chapter?
Ex-golf pro Brandel Chamblee urges Tiger Woods to quit sport after DUI arrest https://t.co/oiBkY4kPp6pic.twitter.com/JoV8Hscgj7
— Page Six (@PageSix) March 29, 2026
Receipts
Confirmed:
- Tiger Woods suffered serious leg injuries in a February 2021 rollover crash in Los Angeles County, detailed by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department at the time.
- Woods was arrested for DUI in May 2017 in Jupiter, Florida; police and court records from that incident documented multiple prescription medications in his system. Woods later said he sought professional help.
- Brandel Chamblee is a former PGA Tour pro and a Golf Channel analyst known for outspoken commentary.
Unverified/Reported:
- The newly reported DUI arrest on Jupiter Island includes specifics about a rollover, negative breath test, alleged impairment, refusal of a urinalysis, and any resulting charges. These details have been reported by entertainment media but are not yet backed by publicly released police documents.
- Chamblee’s exact new quotes urging Woods to retire are attributed to a Golf Central segment; the full broadcast clip or official transcript has not been widely circulated for independent verification.
- Any implication about substances in Woods’ system in the recent incident remains unconfirmed; no toxicology has been made public.
Backstory (for Casual Readers)
For anyone catching up: Tiger Woods, 48, is a 15-time major champion who reshaped golf’s popularity. His career has been interrupted by repeated back, knee, and leg injuries, plus a near-fatal 2021 car crash that required extensive surgery. He also faced a widely covered 2017 DUI arrest tied to prescription medications, after which he said he sought professional help. Brandel Chamblee, a former tour pro turned analyst, has a reputation for blunt assessments of stars, Tiger included.
What’s Next
Watch for an official police report from Jupiter Island authorities and any toxicology findings, which would clarify the new arrest claims. If a court date is set, that calendar entry will be the next hard marker. Expect a statement from Woods or his representatives once there’s something concrete to address. And keep an eye on Golf Channel to see whether the network releases the full Chamblee segment for context. With a major season looming, any confirmed legal development could affect how, and if, Woods tees it up this spring.
Do you see Chamblee’s call as tough love for a legend’s long-term health, or an overreach before facts and records are public?
Sources:
- Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department press statements on Tiger Woods’ Feb. 23, 2021 crash (2021).
- Jupiter Police Department arrest and court records related to Woods’ May 29, 2017 DUI (2017).
- Golf Channel’s Golf Central interview segment with Brandel Chamblee (March 2026, as referenced on-air).

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