LOS ANGELES — Anthony Kim shared this much with Tiger Woods: The longer they stayed away, the more the legend grew. The difference was the amount of highlights to fill the void and what kept them away.
Kim's victory in LIV Golf Adelaide, before the largest crowd on the LIV circuit and in the early morning hours in most parts of America, was nothing short of astonishing because of how long he had been away — 12 years in the prime of his career — and his struggles with drug and alcohol addiction that made him thankful to even be alive, much less playing golf.
''Who I am today is a completely different person,'' Kim said. ''With God, my family, my sobriety being the key things to my life, I can go as far as I want.''
What stands out about this return is the time lapse. Has there been another athlete from any other sport who disappeared for so long and came back to win? Perhaps even more remarkable is that he was in the final group, five shots behind Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau, and didn't miss a shot on his way to a 63.
Kim's mantra is to get 1% better each day. That's what it took to get him back. The question going forward is whether that percentage can increase given the shot of confidence that comes from winning.
The talent was never in question.
Woods was playing a practice round for the 2007 PGA Championship at Southern Hills when, during a wait on the sixth tee, he walked over to the side of the tee box and asked unprompted, ''What do you think of Anthony Kim?'' Woods never missed anything going on in golf.
A year later, Kim won by five shots at Quail Hollow and closed with a 65 to win at Congressional in the AT&T National. Adding to the aura — as if the bling and belt buckles and the strut weren't enough — was his takedown of Sergio Garcia in the 2008 Ryder Cup.