There is “zero chance” Tiger Woods will play in this year’s Masters tournament — and he is likely facing lengthy physical therapy and more surgeries on his shattered leg before he even thinks about even walking again, several medical experts told The Post on Wednesday.

Doctors described the PGA legend’s injuries in Tuesday’s rollover crash in California as “devastating” and all but certain to sideline him from the upcoming Masters.

“There’s no way he’s making the Masters in April, zero chance,” said Dr. William Ricci, the chief of orthopedic trauma at Hospital for Special Surgery. “Masters next April? Maybe.”

Dr. Andrew Brief, an orthopedist with the Ridgewood Orthopedic Group in New Jersey, said it will take time for Woods to just get back on his feet.

“You’re talking about the foot, ankle, leg, tibia,” he said. “It could conceivably be a challenge to walk properly, let alone return to professional sports.”

Tiger Woods seen at the Genesis Invitational on Feb. 21, 2021 days before his near-fatal car crash.
Tiger Woods at the Genesis Invitational on Feb. 21, 2021 — days before his near-fatal car crash.
Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Brief, who is fellowship-trained in foot and ankle reconstruction, also pointed to Woods’ recovery potentially being hampered by his multiple back surgeries.

"There’s no way he’s making the Masters in April, zero chance," said Dr. William Ricci.
“There’s no way he’s making the Masters in April, zero chance,” said Dr. William Ricci.
Hospital for Special Surgery.

“When you couple the fact that he sustained some sort of devastating injury to the right leg, on top of his continued need for recovery from five times having had lumbar spine surgery, his ability to predictably return to an elite level in professional sports is certainly in question,” Brief said.

Woods, 45, sustained “open fractures affecting both the upper and lower portions of the tibia and fibula” that required a rod to fix, and had screws and pins implanted in his foot and ankle bones, according to Dr. Anish Mahajan, chief medical doctor at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center where Woods underwent surgery after the crash.

“He’s very fortunate to be alive,” said Dr. Kirk Campbell, sports medicine specialist and orthopedic surgeon, Department of Orthopedic Surgery at NYU Langone Health. “It’s going to take several months to just walk.”

Dr. Anish Mahajan Tiger Woods sustained “open fractures affecting both the upper and lower portions of the tibia and fibula."
Dr. Anish Mahajan Tiger Woods sustained “open fractures affecting both the upper and lower portions of the tibia and fibula.”
NCSP UCLA

Mahajan also said Woods underwent a procedure to release “the covering of the muscles to relieve pressure due to swelling” — medically known as a fasciotomy, which treats something known as compartment syndrome.

Ricci described the condition as being similar to when “you break a twig in your hand, you feel that reverberation.”

“The muscles around the bone get bruised and injured,” Ricci told The Post. “The muscle that gets bruised and injured swells — it’s like a sausage with the lining on it.”

In order to relieve the pressure, surgeons must cut the tissue around the muscle — which likely will require more surgeries down the road for Woods.

“It either takes multiple surgeries to get the skin closed over the muscle, or sometimes you need a skin graft to cover the muscle,” said Ricci.

Ricci, who is well versed in the trauma sustained in high-speed car crashes, said Woods’ mangled ankle and foot could prove to be the hardest to overcome, depending on the severity of the injuries, which hasn’t been disclosed.

“It’s going to impact his ability to pivot on that leg, to pivot normally and to flex the ankle and foot normally,” Ricci, who works on the Upper East Side, said of the pins and screws Woods had installed.

Woods’ mature age as a professional athlete also doesn’t help in speeding up the recovery process, the doctors said.

“He’s an incredible athlete, but as you get up into your 40s and beyond, the healing times slow down and it takes longer to recover from injuries,” said Dr. Jordan Metzl, sports medicine physician at Hospital for Special Surgery. “This is going to take months. We can’t think about golf yet.”

Brief agreed. 

“Any athlete who’s past their physical prime — and that certainly qualifies for someone who’s in their 40s in most sports — has an uphill battle in regards to ability to return to an elite level of sports performance,” he said.

Ricci estimated Woods will face a year of rehabilitation and physical therapy focused on restoring his mobility, range of motion and strengthening his calf, ankle and foot muscles — all key areas for a professional athlete.

“I don’t know Tiger Woods personally but everything I see and read about him, he’s a pretty motivated person,” said Ricci. “If anyone could [rebound,] it would be him but it’s going to be a battle.”



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