Wheatcroft is hopeful that Tiger Woods can succeed in getting the right kind of help for his problem, allegedly a reliance on painkillers. According to data, more than 5 million Americans suffer from a prescription opioid-use disorder. “When you’ve experienced it yourself, you know the look,” Wheatcroft says. “Every time I’ve seen Tiger on TV in TGL, he looks high. I can tell by the way he talks, the way his face looks, the way he sweats. I just hope he has the right people around him that get him the right help because I believe he is in a bad place. “But everybody has kept putting car keys in his hand and saying, ‘Here you go, man, you’re fine.’ I just know he needs help. He’s probably in a great deal of pain every day from what his body has been through. He’s a huge individual. He’s got a lot of muscle but you can see that he’s got a lot of stuff in his body that he shouldn’t have in his body, too. I hope he can find some peace and find a better path.”