Sport

Thank God we broke up: Tiger's first girl

LOS ANGELES: Tiger Woods' first girlfriend has described her heartbreak when the golf star broke up with her - but said she is still happy she did not end up with him. Dina Gravell-Parr,

From our online archive

LOS ANGELES: Tiger Woods' first girlfriend has described her heartbreak when the golf star broke up with her - but said she is still happy she did not end up with him.

Dina Gravell-Parr, 34, said she met Woods in a high school accounting class and it took him several weeks to pluck up the courage to ask her out.

"At the end of the night I had to ask him 'Well, was that a date?' He was all shy and embarrassed," she told the New York Post . "As we said goodbye, it was really awkward.

"You could tell he didn't know whether to lunge for a kiss or not. So we had a hug instead."

She was 17 and Woods was 16 when they met at school in California and began passing notes during class.

Mrs Gravell-Parr, who lives in Corona, California, said their relationship lasted three years and they had talked about getting married.

But she told the newspaper: "It was college. He was a golfer. I don't flatter myself that he was faithful to me."

She said she felt as if she had been punched in the stomach when Woods ended the romance in a letter, saying his parents were worried she was becoming a distraction to his golf.

For years, Mrs Gravell-Parr said, she had been haunted by what might have been.

"I always hear: 'That could have been you,'" she told the paper. But, despite her former flame's success, she said she was relieved that they had not ended up together.

"A family is not happy because of money, a family is happy because of love and respect. I know my husband loves me and would never hurt me, and that is more important than all the money in the world," she said.

The Daily Telegraph

Women's quota bill defeated in Lok Sabha; fails to get two-thirds majority

Iran says Strait of Hormuz 'completely open' for commercial shipping during ceasefire

NDA slams Opposition over women’s reservation Bill defeat; vows to take issue to women voters

'Religion, freedom of conscience' cannot be confined to same scope: SC in Sabarimala case

How many of the 27 lakh excluded voters can cast their ballots in Bengal polls?

SCROLL FOR NEXT