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    fox-news/person/tiger-woods

    Rush Limbaugh, Tiger Woods among the most successful college dropouts of our time

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    As college graduation season approaches this year, here’s a smart reminder: A college degree is not for everyone.

    In a culture in which higher education is often promoted as a must-have for everyone, some very well known and successful individuals (in an array of fields) decided to ditch the academics in their own lives — and wound up doing very well thanks to hard work, enormous drive and total passion for their interests.

    These eight prominent Americans left college behind and made it big. 

    Some of the most famous college dropouts in America include household names — and some of them may surprise you. 

    Here’s a look at eight prominent Americans who left college behind and made it big. 

    Rush Limbaugh 

    Radio talk show host and media dynamo Rush Limbaugh will always be remembered for his impressive career in political and cultural commentary and broadcasting — all achieved without a college degree.

    FORMER VP PENCE NARRATES ‘AGE OF RUSH,’  A LOOK AT THE MAN BEHIND THE GOLDEN MICROPHONE

    The native of Cape Girardeau, Mo., was known as shy growing up, but there was no doubt he had a passion for radio broadcasting.

    Talk show host Rush Limbaugh in the early days of his radio career preparing for his program at KSEV in Houston, Texas. (©Shepard Sherbell/Corbis Saba/Corbis via Getty Images)

    In the Fox Nation four-part series “Age of Rush,” narrated by former Vice President Mike Pence, excerpts from Limbaugh’s past piece together his trajectory in radio fame.

    “I knew I wanted to do radio when I was 12,” he said in a 2012 interview. “Because I hated school. And getting ready for school every morning, my mother had the radio on. That guy was having fun — and I was having drudgery.”

    COLLEGE DEGREE DOESN’T MEAN MORE MONEY: AMERICA’S CAREER COACH

    Limbaugh landed his first radio job as a disc jockey at a local station before he completed high school. After his graduation in 1969, Limbaugh attended Southwest Missouri State College — and then dropped out to get back on the air. 

    Rush Limbaugh is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in February 2020 during President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

    In 1973, Limbaugh found himself in front of the mic once again under the alias Jeff Christie. 

    It would be another decade before Limbaugh launched his career in political commentary, influenced by former President Ronald Reagan’s persuasive radio presence. Limbaugh himself then influenced scores of others in his field throughout his legendary career.

    Tiger Woods

    Inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame this year, golf icon Tiger Woods risked his college diploma for a chance to go pro.

    Following a childhood in which he developed his love of the links, Woods attended Stanford University in 1994, where he played NCAA golf and studied economics. 

    Tiger Woods practices on Griffith Park golf course as a 16-year old in 1991. (Per-Anders Pettersson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Woods won a record-tying 11 tournaments between his freshman and sophomore years at Stanford, but that’s exactly how long his college experience would last.

    When Woods was offered the opportunity to join the PGA in 1996, he made the decision to withdraw from the university to pursue his pro career.

    TIGER WOODS’ 20 MOST INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES AND LIFE LESSONS

    Since his professional debut, Woods, 46, has clenched 106 worldwide wins and 15 majors. The golfer also has 82 PGA Tour wins under his belt — and is tied with Sam Snead, one of the greatest players of all time, for the most wins.

    Tiger Woods looks on during the second round of The Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 8, 2022, in Augusta, Georgia.

    Woods, most recently, is the 12th-highest paid professional athlete in the world, according to Forbes, earning $60 million in 2021 alone.

    Bill Gates

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates may very well be considered the pioneer of the college-dropout-turned-billionaire trend.

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on Sept. 1, 1983. (©Doug Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Gates ditched his promising education at Harvard University in 1975 after his first two years as a pre-law student. He had discovered his immense potential in the tech space. 

    Today, Microsoft is one of the largest tech companies in the world.

    As part of an undergrad combinatorics course, Gates developed an algorithm to address an unsolved problem — which held the record for speed for 30 years, according to Best Colleges.

    The young student decided to take a leave of absence from the university to found software company Microsoft — today one of the largest tech companies in the world. As of April 2022, it has a more than $2.1 trillion market cap. 

    Bill Gates speaks during the White House’s virtual Climate Leaders Summit on April 23, 2021. (AP)

    The multi-billionaire, 66, has since given back big-time through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which works with partner organizations around the world. In 2021, the Gates Foundation doubled the total amount of donations with $15 billion in allocations, according to The Conversation. 

    Alicia Keys

    Award-winning musician and artist Alicia Keys has brains, beauty and singing ability — but pursuing academics wasn’t in her make-up.

    Alicia Keys on tour in Munich, Germany, on Sept. 7, 2001. (Fryderyk Gabowicz/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    Keys graduated early from New York’s Professional Performing Arts high school as valedictorian at only 16 years old. The musician went on to attend Columbia University. 

    Keys has won 15 Grammy Awards and sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    College life, however, was short-lived for her in the 1990s: The teenager ditched Columbia University for a record deal with Columbia Records after one semester, Variety reported.

    Even though her deal with Columbia fell through, Keys, 41, was saved by producer Clive Davis and signed to Arista Records shortly after, producing her debut album “Songs In A Minor” in 2001.

    Alicia Keys hosts the 62nd annual Grammy Awards on Jan. 26, 2020, in Los Angeles. (Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

    The hit album featured notable songs like “Fallin,’” which spent six weeks at no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. The soul singer went on to win 15 Grammy Awards and 9 Billboard Music Awards. She has sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    Rachael Ray

    Celebrity chef Rachael Ray knows what to cook up in the kitchen — and doing so didn’t require a college education.

    Rachael Ray during a book signing at Sur La Table in San Jose, Califonia, on Dec. 10, 2004. (John Medina/WireImage)

    The popular chef, known for her 30-minute meals, first attended Pace University in 1986 to study literature and communications. After two years, Ray dropped out to save money and re-focus her career goals, according to Good Housekeeping.

    Rachel Ray’s first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    Ray, 53, began offering cooking classes at a gourmet grocery store in Albany, N.Y., fueled by her love of working with food, which turned into demonstrations on local TV. By 1999, her first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    After making soup during a snowy segment of “The Today Show” in 2001, Ray’s career hit the ground running and she landed a contract with the Food Network.

    Chef Rachael Ray on stage during a culinary demonstration on Oct. 12, 2019, in New York City. (John Lamparski/Getty Images for NYCWFF)

    “Good food and a warm kitchen are what makes a house a home,” she has said.

    Ryan Seacrest

    Media personality Ryan Seacrest, born in Atlanta, always knew a life in broadcasting was for him, no matter the sacrifice.

    Ryan Seacrest receives an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree during University of Georgia’s commencement at Sanford Stadium on May 13, 2016, in Athens, Georgia. (Marcus Ingram/Getty Images)

    After interning at Atlanta FM radio station WSTR in high school, he enrolled in the University of Georgia to pursue journalism in 1992. 

    Two years later, the college junior gave his first “Seacrest, out!” to college life and moved to Los Angeles. There, he fronted KYSR-FM’s afternoon drive-time show called “Ryan Seacrest for the Ride Home.”

    Ryan Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016.

    Seacrest’s emergence into the national limelight was arguably his 2002 debut as co-host of the TV singing competition “American Idol.” 

    The emcee, 47, still hosts the program today — and has added to his on-screen repertoire. He took over the hosting of such iconic specials as “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.”

    The co-hosts and finalists of “American Idol” season one, from left, Ryan Seacrest, Kelly Clarkson, Justin Guarini and Brian Dunkleman, on Sept. 3, 2002, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. (Reuters/Fred Prouser)

    Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016 after delivering the school’s commencement address that year.

    Lady Gaga

    Native New Yorker Lady Gaga, born and raised as Stefani Germanotta, always recognized her calling toward stardom.

    The pop star grew up experiencing ridicule by her peers, but her passion for music fueled her fire to make it big. At the age of 11, Gaga began studying with Christina Aguilera’s vocal coach Don Lawrence and continued to practice classical piano and acting as a kid, Mic reported.

    Lady Gaga performs with Tony Bennett during her “Jazz and Piano” residency at Park Theater at Park MGM on Jan. 20, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Park MGM Las Vegas)

    After graduating from high school, Gaga sought out an education at NYU Tisch School of the Arts. But it didn’t last long.

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100.

    At 19 years old, the future star abandoned that life and dropped out of NYU to pursue her dreams. “I left my entire family, got the cheapest apartment I could find and ate s— until somebody would listen,” she told New York Magazine in a 2010 interview.

    After she was signed and then dropped by Def Jam records, Gaga was discovered by R&B artist Akon — who signed her to his own label in 2008.

    Singer Lady Gaga performs at the Oxford Arts Factory on Sept. 24, 2008, in Sydney, Australia. (Don Arnold/WireImage)

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. 

    LADY GAGA’S GREAT KINDNESS TOWARD LIZA MINNELLI: ETIQUETTE EXPERT SAID WE’VE OVERLOOKED IT

    Gaga, 36, has won numerous awards and accolades during her career; was ranked fourth on VH1’s Greatest Women in Music (2012); and was named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world in both 2010 and 2019.

    John Mayer

    There may be a running joke about the frequency of music school dropouts, but John Mayer, 44, turned the stigma into a success.

    Mayer, who grew up in Fairfield, Connecticut, enrolled in Boston’s Berklee College of Music in 1998 but soon realized school wasn’t really his style.

    John Mayer and Bill Kreutzmann of Dead and Company perform on Nov. 9, 2017, in San Francisco.

    In a 2002 interview with MTV, Mayer said his grades at Berklee “were pronounced like ‘d-d-d-f-f-f-f-f’ — like static,” as he had less professional training than his classmates.

    The singer left the competitive music school and moved to Atlanta to pursue a solo career. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Three years later, he released his debut album, “Room for Squares.” He won a Grammy Award in 2003 for the chart-topping hit “Your Body Is a Wonderland.” 

    Singer John Mayer poses with his Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for his song “Your Body is A Wonderland,” at the 45th annual Grammy Awards at New York’s Madison Square Garden, on Feb. 23, 2003. (Reuters/Peter Morgan)

    Mayer has taken home six more Grammys since.

    In 2004, Mayer returned to Berklee – and taught a clinic on making it in the business.

    Rush Limbaugh, Tiger Woods among the most successful college dropouts of our time

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    As college graduation season approaches this year, here’s a smart reminder: A college degree is not for everyone.

    In a culture in which higher education is often promoted as a must-have for everyone, some very well known and successful individuals (in an array of fields) decided to ditch the academics in their own lives — and wound up doing very well thanks to hard work, enormous drive and total passion for their interests.

    These eight prominent Americans left college behind and made it big. 

    Some of the most famous college dropouts in America include household names — and some of them may surprise you. 

    Here’s a look at eight prominent Americans who left college behind and made it big. 

    Rush Limbaugh 

    Radio talk show host and media dynamo Rush Limbaugh will always be remembered for his impressive career in political and cultural commentary and broadcasting — all achieved without a college degree.

    FORMER VP PENCE NARRATES ‘AGE OF RUSH,’  A LOOK AT THE MAN BEHIND THE GOLDEN MICROPHONE

    The native of Cape Girardeau, Mo., was known as shy growing up, but there was no doubt he had a passion for radio broadcasting.

    Talk show host Rush Limbaugh in the early days of his radio career preparing for his program at KSEV in Houston, Texas. (©Shepard Sherbell/Corbis Saba/Corbis via Getty Images)

    In the Fox Nation four-part series “Age of Rush,” narrated by former Vice President Mike Pence, excerpts from Limbaugh’s past piece together his trajectory in radio fame.

    “I knew I wanted to do radio when I was 12,” he said in a 2012 interview. “Because I hated school. And getting ready for school every morning, my mother had the radio on. That guy was having fun — and I was having drudgery.”

    COLLEGE DEGREE DOESN’T MEAN MORE MONEY: AMERICA’S CAREER COACH

    Limbaugh landed his first radio job as a disc jockey at a local station before he completed high school. After his graduation in 1969, Limbaugh attended Southwest Missouri State College — and then dropped out to get back on the air. 

    Rush Limbaugh is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in February 2020 during President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

    In 1973, Limbaugh found himself in front of the mic once again under the alias Jeff Christie. 

    It would be another decade before Limbaugh launched his career in political commentary, influenced by former President Ronald Reagan’s persuasive radio presence. Limbaugh himself then influenced scores of others in his field throughout his legendary career.

    Tiger Woods

    Inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame this year, golf icon Tiger Woods risked his college diploma for a chance to go pro.

    Following a childhood in which he developed his love of the links, Woods attended Stanford University in 1994, where he played NCAA golf and studied economics. 

    Tiger Woods practices on Griffith Park golf course as a 16-year old in 1991. (Per-Anders Pettersson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Woods won a record-tying 11 tournaments between his freshman and sophomore years at Stanford, but that’s exactly how long his college experience would last.

    When Woods was offered the opportunity to join the PGA in 1996, he made the decision to withdraw from the university to pursue his pro career.

    TIGER WOODS’ 20 MOST INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES AND LIFE LESSONS

    Since his professional debut, Woods, 46, has clenched 106 worldwide wins and 15 majors. The golfer also has 82 PGA Tour wins under his belt — and is tied with Sam Snead, one of the greatest players of all time, for the most wins.

    Tiger Woods looks on during the second round of The Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 8, 2022, in Augusta, Georgia.

    Woods, most recently, is the 12th-highest paid professional athlete in the world, according to Forbes, earning $60 million in 2021 alone.

    Bill Gates

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates may very well be considered the pioneer of the college-dropout-turned-billionaire trend.

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on Sept. 1, 1983. (©Doug Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Gates ditched his promising education at Harvard University in 1975 after his first two years as a pre-law student. He had discovered his immense potential in the tech space. 

    Today, Microsoft is one of the largest tech companies in the world.

    As part of an undergrad combinatorics course, Gates developed an algorithm to address an unsolved problem — which held the record for speed for 30 years, according to Best Colleges.

    The young student decided to take a leave of absence from the university to found software company Microsoft — today one of the largest tech companies in the world. As of April 2022, it has a more than $2.1 trillion market cap. 

    Bill Gates speaks during the White House’s virtual Climate Leaders Summit on April 23, 2021. (AP)

    The multi-billionaire, 66, has since given back big-time through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which works with partner organizations around the world. In 2021, the Gates Foundation doubled the total amount of donations with $15 billion in allocations, according to The Conversation. 

    Alicia Keys

    Award-winning musician and artist Alicia Keys has brains, beauty and singing ability — but pursuing academics wasn’t in her make-up.

    Alicia Keys on tour in Munich, Germany, on Sept. 7, 2001. (Fryderyk Gabowicz/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    Keys graduated early from New York’s Professional Performing Arts high school as valedictorian at only 16 years old. The musician went on to attend Columbia University. 

    Keys has won 15 Grammy Awards and sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    College life, however, was short-lived for her in the 1990s: The teenager ditched Columbia University for a record deal with Columbia Records after one semester, Variety reported.

    Even though her deal with Columbia fell through, Keys, 41, was saved by producer Clive Davis and signed to Arista Records shortly after, producing her debut album “Songs In A Minor” in 2001.

    Alicia Keys hosts the 62nd annual Grammy Awards on Jan. 26, 2020, in Los Angeles. (Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

    The hit album featured notable songs like “Fallin,’” which spent six weeks at no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. The soul singer went on to win 15 Grammy Awards and 9 Billboard Music Awards. She has sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    Rachael Ray

    Celebrity chef Rachael Ray knows what to cook up in the kitchen — and doing so didn’t require a college education.

    Rachael Ray during a book signing at Sur La Table in San Jose, Califonia, on Dec. 10, 2004. (John Medina/WireImage)

    The popular chef, known for her 30-minute meals, first attended Pace University in 1986 to study literature and communications. After two years, Ray dropped out to save money and re-focus her career goals, according to Good Housekeeping.

    Rachel Ray’s first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    Ray, 53, began offering cooking classes at a gourmet grocery store in Albany, N.Y., fueled by her love of working with food, which turned into demonstrations on local TV. By 1999, her first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    After making soup during a snowy segment of “The Today Show” in 2001, Ray’s career hit the ground running and she landed a contract with the Food Network.

    Chef Rachael Ray on stage during a culinary demonstration on Oct. 12, 2019, in New York City. (John Lamparski/Getty Images for NYCWFF)

    “Good food and a warm kitchen are what makes a house a home,” she has said.

    Ryan Seacrest

    Media personality Ryan Seacrest, born in Atlanta, always knew a life in broadcasting was for him, no matter the sacrifice.

    Ryan Seacrest receives an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree during University of Georgia’s commencement at Sanford Stadium on May 13, 2016, in Athens, Georgia. (Marcus Ingram/Getty Images)

    After interning at Atlanta FM radio station WSTR in high school, he enrolled in the University of Georgia to pursue journalism in 1992. 

    Two years later, the college junior gave his first “Seacrest, out!” to college life and moved to Los Angeles. There, he fronted KYSR-FM’s afternoon drive-time show called “Ryan Seacrest for the Ride Home.”

    Ryan Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016.

    Seacrest’s emergence into the national limelight was arguably his 2002 debut as co-host of the TV singing competition “American Idol.” 

    The emcee, 47, still hosts the program today — and has added to his on-screen repertoire. He took over the hosting of such iconic specials as “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.”

    The co-hosts and finalists of “American Idol” season one, from left, Ryan Seacrest, Kelly Clarkson, Justin Guarini and Brian Dunkleman, on Sept. 3, 2002, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. (Reuters/Fred Prouser)

    Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016 after delivering the school’s commencement address that year.

    Lady Gaga

    Native New Yorker Lady Gaga, born and raised as Stefani Germanotta, always recognized her calling toward stardom.

    The pop star grew up experiencing ridicule by her peers, but her passion for music fueled her fire to make it big. At the age of 11, Gaga began studying with Christina Aguilera’s vocal coach Don Lawrence and continued to practice classical piano and acting as a kid, Mic reported.

    Lady Gaga performs with Tony Bennett during her “Jazz and Piano” residency at Park Theater at Park MGM on Jan. 20, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Park MGM Las Vegas)

    After graduating from high school, Gaga sought out an education at NYU Tisch School of the Arts. But it didn’t last long.

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100.

    At 19 years old, the future star abandoned that life and dropped out of NYU to pursue her dreams. “I left my entire family, got the cheapest apartment I could find and ate s— until somebody would listen,” she told New York Magazine in a 2010 interview.

    After she was signed and then dropped by Def Jam records, Gaga was discovered by R&B artist Akon — who signed her to his own label in 2008.

    Singer Lady Gaga performs at the Oxford Arts Factory on Sept. 24, 2008, in Sydney, Australia. (Don Arnold/WireImage)

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. 

    LADY GAGA’S GREAT KINDNESS TOWARD LIZA MINNELLI: ETIQUETTE EXPERT SAID WE’VE OVERLOOKED IT

    Gaga, 36, has won numerous awards and accolades during her career; was ranked fourth on VH1’s Greatest Women in Music (2012); and was named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world in both 2010 and 2019.

    John Mayer

    There may be a running joke about the frequency of music school dropouts, but John Mayer, 44, turned the stigma into a success.

    Mayer, who grew up in Fairfield, Connecticut, enrolled in Boston’s Berklee College of Music in 1998 but soon realized school wasn’t really his style.

    John Mayer and Bill Kreutzmann of Dead and Company perform on Nov. 9, 2017, in San Francisco.

    In a 2002 interview with MTV, Mayer said his grades at Berklee “were pronounced like ‘d-d-d-f-f-f-f-f’ — like static,” as he had less professional training than his classmates.

    The singer left the competitive music school and moved to Atlanta to pursue a solo career. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Three years later, he released his debut album, “Room for Squares.” He won a Grammy Award in 2003 for the chart-topping hit “Your Body Is a Wonderland.” 

    Singer John Mayer poses with his Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for his song “Your Body is A Wonderland,” at the 45th annual Grammy Awards at New York’s Madison Square Garden, on Feb. 23, 2003. (Reuters/Peter Morgan)

    Mayer has taken home six more Grammys since.

    In 2004, Mayer returned to Berklee – and taught a clinic on making it in the business.

    Rush Limbaugh, Tiger Woods among the most successful college dropouts of our time

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    As college graduation season approaches this year, here’s a smart reminder: A college degree is not for everyone.

    In a culture in which higher education is often promoted as a must-have for everyone, some very well known and successful individuals (in an array of fields) decided to ditch the academics in their own lives — and wound up doing very well thanks to hard work, enormous drive and total passion for their interests.

    These eight prominent Americans left college behind and made it big. 

    Some of the most famous college dropouts in America include household names — and some of them may surprise you. 

    Here’s a look at eight prominent Americans who left college behind and made it big. 

    Rush Limbaugh 

    Radio talk show host and media dynamo Rush Limbaugh will always be remembered for his impressive career in political and cultural commentary and broadcasting — all achieved without a college degree.

    FORMER VP PENCE NARRATES ‘AGE OF RUSH,’  A LOOK AT THE MAN BEHIND THE GOLDEN MICROPHONE

    The native of Cape Girardeau, Mo., was known as shy growing up, but there was no doubt he had a passion for radio broadcasting.

    Talk show host Rush Limbaugh in the early days of his radio career preparing for his program at KSEV in Houston, Texas. (©Shepard Sherbell/Corbis Saba/Corbis via Getty Images)

    In the Fox Nation four-part series “Age of Rush,” narrated by former Vice President Mike Pence, excerpts from Limbaugh’s past piece together his trajectory in radio fame.

    “I knew I wanted to do radio when I was 12,” he said in a 2012 interview. “Because I hated school. And getting ready for school every morning, my mother had the radio on. That guy was having fun — and I was having drudgery.”

    COLLEGE DEGREE DOESN’T MEAN MORE MONEY: AMERICA’S CAREER COACH

    Limbaugh landed his first radio job as a disc jockey at a local station before he completed high school. After his graduation in 1969, Limbaugh attended Southwest Missouri State College — and then dropped out to get back on the air. 

    Rush Limbaugh is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in February 2020 during President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

    In 1973, Limbaugh found himself in front of the mic once again under the alias Jeff Christie. 

    It would be another decade before Limbaugh launched his career in political commentary, influenced by former President Ronald Reagan’s persuasive radio presence. Limbaugh himself then influenced scores of others in his field throughout his legendary career.

    Tiger Woods

    Inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame this year, golf icon Tiger Woods risked his college diploma for a chance to go pro.

    Following a childhood in which he developed his love of the links, Woods attended Stanford University in 1994, where he played NCAA golf and studied economics. 

    Tiger Woods practices on Griffith Park golf course as a 16-year old in 1991. (Per-Anders Pettersson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Woods won a record-tying 11 tournaments between his freshman and sophomore years at Stanford, but that’s exactly how long his college experience would last.

    When Woods was offered the opportunity to join the PGA in 1996, he made the decision to withdraw from the university to pursue his pro career.

    TIGER WOODS’ 20 MOST INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES AND LIFE LESSONS

    Since his professional debut, Woods, 46, has clenched 106 worldwide wins and 15 majors. The golfer also has 82 PGA Tour wins under his belt — and is tied with Sam Snead, one of the greatest players of all time, for the most wins.

    Tiger Woods looks on during the second round of The Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 8, 2022, in Augusta, Georgia.

    Woods, most recently, is the 12th-highest paid professional athlete in the world, according to Forbes, earning $60 million in 2021 alone.

    Bill Gates

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates may very well be considered the pioneer of the college-dropout-turned-billionaire trend.

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on Sept. 1, 1983. (©Doug Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Gates ditched his promising education at Harvard University in 1975 after his first two years as a pre-law student. He had discovered his immense potential in the tech space. 

    Today, Microsoft is one of the largest tech companies in the world.

    As part of an undergrad combinatorics course, Gates developed an algorithm to address an unsolved problem — which held the record for speed for 30 years, according to Best Colleges.

    The young student decided to take a leave of absence from the university to found software company Microsoft — today one of the largest tech companies in the world. As of April 2022, it has a more than $2.1 trillion market cap. 

    Bill Gates speaks during the White House’s virtual Climate Leaders Summit on April 23, 2021. (AP)

    The multi-billionaire, 66, has since given back big-time through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which works with partner organizations around the world. In 2021, the Gates Foundation doubled the total amount of donations with $15 billion in allocations, according to The Conversation. 

    Alicia Keys

    Award-winning musician and artist Alicia Keys has brains, beauty and singing ability — but pursuing academics wasn’t in her make-up.

    Alicia Keys on tour in Munich, Germany, on Sept. 7, 2001. (Fryderyk Gabowicz/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    Keys graduated early from New York’s Professional Performing Arts high school as valedictorian at only 16 years old. The musician went on to attend Columbia University. 

    Keys has won 15 Grammy Awards and sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    College life, however, was short-lived for her in the 1990s: The teenager ditched Columbia University for a record deal with Columbia Records after one semester, Variety reported.

    Even though her deal with Columbia fell through, Keys, 41, was saved by producer Clive Davis and signed to Arista Records shortly after, producing her debut album “Songs In A Minor” in 2001.

    Alicia Keys hosts the 62nd annual Grammy Awards on Jan. 26, 2020, in Los Angeles. (Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

    The hit album featured notable songs like “Fallin,’” which spent six weeks at no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. The soul singer went on to win 15 Grammy Awards and 9 Billboard Music Awards. She has sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    Rachael Ray

    Celebrity chef Rachael Ray knows what to cook up in the kitchen — and doing so didn’t require a college education.

    Rachael Ray during a book signing at Sur La Table in San Jose, Califonia, on Dec. 10, 2004. (John Medina/WireImage)

    The popular chef, known for her 30-minute meals, first attended Pace University in 1986 to study literature and communications. After two years, Ray dropped out to save money and re-focus her career goals, according to Good Housekeeping.

    Rachel Ray’s first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    Ray, 53, began offering cooking classes at a gourmet grocery store in Albany, N.Y., fueled by her love of working with food, which turned into demonstrations on local TV. By 1999, her first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    After making soup during a snowy segment of “The Today Show” in 2001, Ray’s career hit the ground running and she landed a contract with the Food Network.

    Chef Rachael Ray on stage during a culinary demonstration on Oct. 12, 2019, in New York City. (John Lamparski/Getty Images for NYCWFF)

    “Good food and a warm kitchen are what makes a house a home,” she has said.

    Ryan Seacrest

    Media personality Ryan Seacrest, born in Atlanta, always knew a life in broadcasting was for him, no matter the sacrifice.

    Ryan Seacrest receives an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree during University of Georgia’s commencement at Sanford Stadium on May 13, 2016, in Athens, Georgia. (Marcus Ingram/Getty Images)

    After interning at Atlanta FM radio station WSTR in high school, he enrolled in the University of Georgia to pursue journalism in 1992. 

    Two years later, the college junior gave his first “Seacrest, out!” to college life and moved to Los Angeles. There, he fronted KYSR-FM’s afternoon drive-time show called “Ryan Seacrest for the Ride Home.”

    Ryan Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016.

    Seacrest’s emergence into the national limelight was arguably his 2002 debut as co-host of the TV singing competition “American Idol.” 

    The emcee, 47, still hosts the program today — and has added to his on-screen repertoire. He took over the hosting of such iconic specials as “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.”

    The co-hosts and finalists of “American Idol” season one, from left, Ryan Seacrest, Kelly Clarkson, Justin Guarini and Brian Dunkleman, on Sept. 3, 2002, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. (Reuters/Fred Prouser)

    Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016 after delivering the school’s commencement address that year.

    Lady Gaga

    Native New Yorker Lady Gaga, born and raised as Stefani Germanotta, always recognized her calling toward stardom.

    The pop star grew up experiencing ridicule by her peers, but her passion for music fueled her fire to make it big. At the age of 11, Gaga began studying with Christina Aguilera’s vocal coach Don Lawrence and continued to practice classical piano and acting as a kid, Mic reported.

    Lady Gaga performs with Tony Bennett during her “Jazz and Piano” residency at Park Theater at Park MGM on Jan. 20, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Park MGM Las Vegas)

    After graduating from high school, Gaga sought out an education at NYU Tisch School of the Arts. But it didn’t last long.

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100.

    At 19 years old, the future star abandoned that life and dropped out of NYU to pursue her dreams. “I left my entire family, got the cheapest apartment I could find and ate s— until somebody would listen,” she told New York Magazine in a 2010 interview.

    After she was signed and then dropped by Def Jam records, Gaga was discovered by R&B artist Akon — who signed her to his own label in 2008.

    Singer Lady Gaga performs at the Oxford Arts Factory on Sept. 24, 2008, in Sydney, Australia. (Don Arnold/WireImage)

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. 

    LADY GAGA’S GREAT KINDNESS TOWARD LIZA MINNELLI: ETIQUETTE EXPERT SAID WE’VE OVERLOOKED IT

    Gaga, 36, has won numerous awards and accolades during her career; was ranked fourth on VH1’s Greatest Women in Music (2012); and was named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world in both 2010 and 2019.

    John Mayer

    There may be a running joke about the frequency of music school dropouts, but John Mayer, 44, turned the stigma into a success.

    Mayer, who grew up in Fairfield, Connecticut, enrolled in Boston’s Berklee College of Music in 1998 but soon realized school wasn’t really his style.

    John Mayer and Bill Kreutzmann of Dead and Company perform on Nov. 9, 2017, in San Francisco.

    In a 2002 interview with MTV, Mayer said his grades at Berklee “were pronounced like ‘d-d-d-f-f-f-f-f’ — like static,” as he had less professional training than his classmates.

    The singer left the competitive music school and moved to Atlanta to pursue a solo career. 

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    Three years later, he released his debut album, “Room for Squares.” He won a Grammy Award in 2003 for the chart-topping hit “Your Body Is a Wonderland.” 

    Singer John Mayer poses with his Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for his song “Your Body is A Wonderland,” at the 45th annual Grammy Awards at New York’s Madison Square Garden, on Feb. 23, 2003. (Reuters/Peter Morgan)

    Mayer has taken home six more Grammys since.

    In 2004, Mayer returned to Berklee – and taught a clinic on making it in the business.

    Rush Limbaugh, Tiger Woods among the most successful college dropouts of our time

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    As college graduation season approaches this year, here’s a smart reminder: A college degree is not for everyone.

    In a culture in which higher education is often promoted as a must-have for everyone, some very well known and successful individuals (in an array of fields) decided to ditch the academics in their own lives — and wound up doing very well thanks to hard work, enormous drive and total passion for their interests.

    These eight prominent Americans left college behind and made it big. 

    Some of the most famous college dropouts in America include household names — and some of them may surprise you. 

    Here’s a look at eight prominent Americans who left college behind and made it big. 

    Rush Limbaugh 

    Radio talk show host and media dynamo Rush Limbaugh will always be remembered for his impressive career in political and cultural commentary and broadcasting — all achieved without a college degree.

    FORMER VP PENCE NARRATES ‘AGE OF RUSH,’  A LOOK AT THE MAN BEHIND THE GOLDEN MICROPHONE

    The native of Cape Girardeau, Mo., was known as shy growing up, but there was no doubt he had a passion for radio broadcasting.

    Talk show host Rush Limbaugh in the early days of his radio career preparing for his program at KSEV in Houston, Texas. (©Shepard Sherbell/Corbis Saba/Corbis via Getty Images)

    In the Fox Nation four-part series “Age of Rush,” narrated by former Vice President Mike Pence, excerpts from Limbaugh’s past piece together his trajectory in radio fame.

    “I knew I wanted to do radio when I was 12,” he said in a 2012 interview. “Because I hated school. And getting ready for school every morning, my mother had the radio on. That guy was having fun — and I was having drudgery.”

    COLLEGE DEGREE DOESN’T MEAN MORE MONEY: AMERICA’S CAREER COACH

    Limbaugh landed his first radio job as a disc jockey at a local station before he completed high school. After his graduation in 1969, Limbaugh attended Southwest Missouri State College — and then dropped out to get back on the air. 

    Rush Limbaugh is awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in February 2020 during President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address. (Reuters/Jonathan Ernst)

    In 1973, Limbaugh found himself in front of the mic once again under the alias Jeff Christie. 

    It would be another decade before Limbaugh launched his career in political commentary, influenced by former President Ronald Reagan’s persuasive radio presence. Limbaugh himself then influenced scores of others in his field throughout his legendary career.

    Tiger Woods

    Inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame this year, golf icon Tiger Woods risked his college diploma for a chance to go pro.

    Following a childhood in which he developed his love of the links, Woods attended Stanford University in 1994, where he played NCAA golf and studied economics. 

    Tiger Woods practices on Griffith Park golf course as a 16-year old in 1991. (Per-Anders Pettersson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Woods won a record-tying 11 tournaments between his freshman and sophomore years at Stanford, but that’s exactly how long his college experience would last.

    When Woods was offered the opportunity to join the PGA in 1996, he made the decision to withdraw from the university to pursue his pro career.

    TIGER WOODS’ 20 MOST INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES AND LIFE LESSONS

    Since his professional debut, Woods, 46, has clenched 106 worldwide wins and 15 majors. The golfer also has 82 PGA Tour wins under his belt — and is tied with Sam Snead, one of the greatest players of all time, for the most wins.

    Tiger Woods looks on during the second round of The Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 8, 2022, in Augusta, Georgia.

    Woods, most recently, is the 12th-highest paid professional athlete in the world, according to Forbes, earning $60 million in 2021 alone.

    Bill Gates

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates may very well be considered the pioneer of the college-dropout-turned-billionaire trend.

    Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on Sept. 1, 1983. (©Doug Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images)

    Gates ditched his promising education at Harvard University in 1975 after his first two years as a pre-law student. He had discovered his immense potential in the tech space. 

    Today, Microsoft is one of the largest tech companies in the world.

    As part of an undergrad combinatorics course, Gates developed an algorithm to address an unsolved problem — which held the record for speed for 30 years, according to Best Colleges.

    The young student decided to take a leave of absence from the university to found software company Microsoft — today one of the largest tech companies in the world. As of April 2022, it has a more than $2.1 trillion market cap. 

    Bill Gates speaks during the White House’s virtual Climate Leaders Summit on April 23, 2021. (AP)

    The multi-billionaire, 66, has since given back big-time through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which works with partner organizations around the world. In 2021, the Gates Foundation doubled the total amount of donations with $15 billion in allocations, according to The Conversation. 

    Alicia Keys

    Award-winning musician and artist Alicia Keys has brains, beauty and singing ability — but pursuing academics wasn’t in her make-up.

    Alicia Keys on tour in Munich, Germany, on Sept. 7, 2001. (Fryderyk Gabowicz/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    Keys graduated early from New York’s Professional Performing Arts high school as valedictorian at only 16 years old. The musician went on to attend Columbia University. 

    Keys has won 15 Grammy Awards and sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    College life, however, was short-lived for her in the 1990s: The teenager ditched Columbia University for a record deal with Columbia Records after one semester, Variety reported.

    Even though her deal with Columbia fell through, Keys, 41, was saved by producer Clive Davis and signed to Arista Records shortly after, producing her debut album “Songs In A Minor” in 2001.

    Alicia Keys hosts the 62nd annual Grammy Awards on Jan. 26, 2020, in Los Angeles. (Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

    The hit album featured notable songs like “Fallin,’” which spent six weeks at no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. The soul singer went on to win 15 Grammy Awards and 9 Billboard Music Awards. She has sold more than 65 million records worldwide.

    Rachael Ray

    Celebrity chef Rachael Ray knows what to cook up in the kitchen — and doing so didn’t require a college education.

    Rachael Ray during a book signing at Sur La Table in San Jose, Califonia, on Dec. 10, 2004. (John Medina/WireImage)

    The popular chef, known for her 30-minute meals, first attended Pace University in 1986 to study literature and communications. After two years, Ray dropped out to save money and re-focus her career goals, according to Good Housekeeping.

    Rachel Ray’s first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    Ray, 53, began offering cooking classes at a gourmet grocery store in Albany, N.Y., fueled by her love of working with food, which turned into demonstrations on local TV. By 1999, her first cookbook sold 10,000 copies in two weeks.

    After making soup during a snowy segment of “The Today Show” in 2001, Ray’s career hit the ground running and she landed a contract with the Food Network.

    Chef Rachael Ray on stage during a culinary demonstration on Oct. 12, 2019, in New York City. (John Lamparski/Getty Images for NYCWFF)

    “Good food and a warm kitchen are what makes a house a home,” she has said.

    Ryan Seacrest

    Media personality Ryan Seacrest, born in Atlanta, always knew a life in broadcasting was for him, no matter the sacrifice.

    Ryan Seacrest receives an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree during University of Georgia’s commencement at Sanford Stadium on May 13, 2016, in Athens, Georgia. (Marcus Ingram/Getty Images)

    After interning at Atlanta FM radio station WSTR in high school, he enrolled in the University of Georgia to pursue journalism in 1992. 

    Two years later, the college junior gave his first “Seacrest, out!” to college life and moved to Los Angeles. There, he fronted KYSR-FM’s afternoon drive-time show called “Ryan Seacrest for the Ride Home.”

    Ryan Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016.

    Seacrest’s emergence into the national limelight was arguably his 2002 debut as co-host of the TV singing competition “American Idol.” 

    The emcee, 47, still hosts the program today — and has added to his on-screen repertoire. He took over the hosting of such iconic specials as “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.”

    The co-hosts and finalists of “American Idol” season one, from left, Ryan Seacrest, Kelly Clarkson, Justin Guarini and Brian Dunkleman, on Sept. 3, 2002, at the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood. (Reuters/Fred Prouser)

    Seacrest’s higher education pursuit finally came full circle when he earned an honorary doctorate from the University of Georgia in 2016 after delivering the school’s commencement address that year.

    Lady Gaga

    Native New Yorker Lady Gaga, born and raised as Stefani Germanotta, always recognized her calling toward stardom.

    The pop star grew up experiencing ridicule by her peers, but her passion for music fueled her fire to make it big. At the age of 11, Gaga began studying with Christina Aguilera’s vocal coach Don Lawrence and continued to practice classical piano and acting as a kid, Mic reported.

    Lady Gaga performs with Tony Bennett during her “Jazz and Piano” residency at Park Theater at Park MGM on Jan. 20, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Park MGM Las Vegas)

    After graduating from high school, Gaga sought out an education at NYU Tisch School of the Arts. But it didn’t last long.

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100.

    At 19 years old, the future star abandoned that life and dropped out of NYU to pursue her dreams. “I left my entire family, got the cheapest apartment I could find and ate s— until somebody would listen,” she told New York Magazine in a 2010 interview.

    After she was signed and then dropped by Def Jam records, Gaga was discovered by R&B artist Akon — who signed her to his own label in 2008.

    Singer Lady Gaga performs at the Oxford Arts Factory on Sept. 24, 2008, in Sydney, Australia. (Don Arnold/WireImage)

    Gaga’s first album, “The Fame,” topped the charts, with tracks like “Just Dance” and “Poker Face” hitting no. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100. 

    LADY GAGA’S GREAT KINDNESS TOWARD LIZA MINNELLI: ETIQUETTE EXPERT SAID WE’VE OVERLOOKED IT

    Gaga, 36, has won numerous awards and accolades during her career; was ranked fourth on VH1’s Greatest Women in Music (2012); and was named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world in both 2010 and 2019.

    John Mayer

    There may be a running joke about the frequency of music school dropouts, but John Mayer, 44, turned the stigma into a success.

    Mayer, who grew up in Fairfield, Connecticut, enrolled in Boston’s Berklee College of Music in 1998 but soon realized school wasn’t really his style.

    John Mayer and Bill Kreutzmann of Dead and Company perform on Nov. 9, 2017, in San Francisco.

    In a 2002 interview with MTV, Mayer said his grades at Berklee “were pronounced like ‘d-d-d-f-f-f-f-f’ — like static,” as he had less professional training than his classmates.

    The singer left the competitive music school and moved to Atlanta to pursue a solo career. 

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    Three years later, he released his debut album, “Room for Squares.” He won a Grammy Award in 2003 for the chart-topping hit “Your Body Is a Wonderland.” 

    Singer John Mayer poses with his Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for his song “Your Body is A Wonderland,” at the 45th annual Grammy Awards at New York’s Madison Square Garden, on Feb. 23, 2003. (Reuters/Peter Morgan)

    Mayer has taken home six more Grammys since.

    In 2004, Mayer returned to Berklee – and taught a clinic on making it in the business.

    As Tiger Woods’ Masters speculation comes to fever pitch, he’s revealed what hurdle he has to overcome

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    Tiger Woods is hemming and hawing about playing The Masters this week but for him to even be thinking about it is remarkable.

    Woods suffered devastating leg injuries in a car crash in Los Angeles in February 2021. The only small dose of competition he’s had on the course this year was when he participated in the PNC Championship with his son Charlie. Woods was spotted landing at Augusta, Georgia, last week, sparking speculation of his possible return to competitive play. He even tweeted it would be a “game-time decision.”

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    Tiger Woods walks from the practice area with Rob McNamara, executive vice president at TGR, and Billy Horschel prior to the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 3, 2022, in Augusta, Georgia. (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)

    “I will be heading up to Augusta today to continue my preparation and practice. It will be a game-time decision on whether I compete,” he wrote in a tweet on Sunday.

    He was on the course on Sunday afternoon, driving the ball and giving the difficult course a shot.

    Golfer Billy Horschel gave a good report on how Woods looked on the course.

    “He looked good to me,” former FedExCup champion Billy Horschel, who watched Woods hit balls Sunday afternoon, said via PGATour.com. “He looked like the Tiger we saw before the accident … the way the swing looked and the speed.”

    Horschel said he and the fellow competitors are just “giddy” over the fact that Woods is at Augusta in the days leading up to the tournament.

    THE MASTERS TWITTER ACCOUNT TEASES TIGER WOODS’ RETURN TO GOLF COURSE

    Tiger Woods and Billy Horschel in the practice area of Augusta National Golf Club on April 3, 2022, in Augusta, Georgia. (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

    Woods has been open about his recovery from the car crash.

    He attended the Genesis Invitational in February but did not play. He said at the time walking the course without a golf cart was the biggest problem he faced.

    “I’m still working on the walking part,” he said. “My foot was a little messed up there about a year ago, so the walking part is something that I’m still working on, working on strength and development in that. It takes time. What’s frustrating is it’s not at my timetable. 

    “I want to be at a certain place, but I’m not. I’ve just got to continue working. I’m getting better, yes. But as I said, not at the speed and rate that I would like.”

    He added he was OK doing “weekend warrior golf.”

    “That’s easy. But to be able to be out here, call it six rounds of golf: practice round, Pro-Am, four competitive days. It’s the cumulative effect of all that. I’m not able to do that yet,” he said.

    “I can walk on a treadmill all day. That’s easy. It’s just straight. There’s no bumps in the road. But walking on a golf course where there’s undulations, I have a long way to go. … Each and every day is a fight, and I welcome that fight.”

    Tiger Woods at Augusta National Golf Club on April 3, 2022, in Augusta, Georgia.  (Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

    Woods has made 23 career starts at the Masters, where he has 14 top-10 finishes. He put on his first green jacket in 1997 at age 21 and again during a career comeback in 2019 at age 43.

    Woods also won the Masters in 2001, 2002 and 2005. He last played in the tournament in 2020. He didn’t play last year as he was recovering from injuries suffered in the car crash.

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    The first round of the 86th Masters begins April 7 and runs through April 10. Hideki Matsuyama is the defending champion.

    Fox News’ David Aaro contributed to this report.

    Tiger Woods headlines induction class for World Golf Hall of Fame

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    The candidates are introduced one at a time, along with a list of their accomplishments to support why they belong in the World Golf Hall of Fame.

    Except for Tiger Woods.

    There was nothing to say that hasn’t been seen or at least talked about. There was no debate. His election was unanimous.

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    Jon Rahm wasn’t part of the committee that selected the Class of 2022 that was to be inducted Wednesday night. His reaction to the inevitable spoke for everyone in golf who witnessed Woods win at a historic rate and leave an imprint on the game measured in money and prestige for him and everyone who followed.

    “What can I say about Tiger that we haven’t said already?” Rahm said. “He inspired a whole generation. Besides entertaining all of us for 20 years and doing unbelievable things, he inspired the generation of players that you’re seeing today.”

    Woods was the headliner Wednesday in an induction class that fittingly included Tim Finchem, the retired PGA Tour commissioner who parlayed the powerful effect of Woods with astronomical increases in prize money and a tour that became the destination for players around the world.

    Also being inducted were three-time U.S. Women’s Open champion Susie Maxwell Berning and the late Marion Hollins, the first woman to develop golf courses and a former U.S. Women’s Amateur champion and Curtis Cup captain.

    FILE – Tiger Woods celebrates on the 18th green after wining the Tour Championship golf tournament Sunday, Sept. 23, 2018, in Atlanta. Woods will be the star attraction in the World Golf Hall of Fame induction ceremony Wednesday, March 9, 2022. (AP Photo/John Amis, File)

    The ceremony was moved from the World Golf Village, which held previous ceremonies in Florida, to the new PGA Tour headquarters located about a mile away from where Woods first rose to fame.

    Sure, there was the appearance on the Mike Douglas Show when he was a 2-year-old prodigy, and the three straight U.S. Junior Amateur titles. It was on the island green on the par-3 17th hole at the TPC Sawgrass in the 1994 U.S. Amateur when Woods first delivered the uppercut that would define his celebration.

    That was the first of an unprecedented three straight U.S. Amateur titles, and it only got better.

    Much better.

    His record is so strong that Woods had three Hall of Fame careers in one. After four full years as a pro, he already had the career Grand Slam and 24 victories on the PGA Tour. The first major was the 1997 Masters, which he won by 12, one of 20 records.

    When he was 30, he already had 46 wins on tour and 10 majors, including a sweep of the majors, a feat no one had ever accomplished.

    Woods now has a record-tying 82 wins on the PGA Tour, along with 15 majors, three behind the gold standard set by Jack Nicklaus.

    More than his wins was his influence.

    Woods never wanted to be looked upon as a golfer but rather an athlete. He wasn’t the first to find the gym, but his devotion to strength and fitness created a template for others to follow.

    “Tiger changed people’s perception of golf from a game to a sport,” Padraig Harrington said.

    If players were too young to remember the first Masters win, they remember the iconic chip-in when he won at Augusta National in 2005, or the time he won his third U.S. Open title at Torrey Pines despite playing with a double stress fracture in his left leg and a knee with shredded ligaments that required reconstructive surgery a week later.

    “He created what golf is today,” Xander Schauffele.

    The Players Championship prize fund this week is $20 million, and that’s not lost on the players in the field. The entire purse was $3.5 million in 1997 when Woods made his debut. The winner this week gets $3.6 million.

    Woods’ popularity, his showmanship, was so great that Finchem was able to turn that into television contracts that sent purses soaring.

    “His impact on the game is probably the most profound of anybody ever, especially the pro game,” said Patrick Cantlay, who won $15 million last year by capturing the FedEx Cup. “I wouldn’t say I know enough about (Arnold) Palmer or Bobby Jones or Nicklaus to say how they impacted that at the time. But I think every pro out here owes a debt of gratitude to Tiger because this sport wouldn’t be where it is today without his impact.”

    Finchem also created the World Golf Championships events, and a Presidents Cup to give the burgeoning group of international players from outside Europe a chance to compete in team matches. And he kept the PGA Tour strong with sponsors during the recession of 2008, which coincided with Woods recovering from knee surgery.

    Maxwell Berning won only 11 times on the LPGA Tour, but she played in an era when juggling family and golf led to short careers.

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    She won the U.S. Women’s Open three times — only five others have won at least three — in a six-year span. She also won the Women’s Western Open, a major in her era.

    Hollins financed and developed a golf course for women in New York and was the brains behind two fabled golf courses in California — Cypress Point and Pasatiempo. Hollins, who died in 1944 at age 51, was a visionary in golf course architecture, a confidante of Alister Mackenzie and a U.S. Women’s Amateur champion.

    Tiger Woods could have some kind of Ryder Cup impact, US captain says

    The Ryder Cup is only a few months away, but the possibility of Tiger Woods having some sort of impact on the U.S. team for the event was raised Wednesday.

    Steve Stricker, the U.S. team captain, told reporters ahead of this weekend’s PGA Championship that he talked to Woods about the possibility of even making the trip to Whistling Straits but downplayed the potential of it happening.

    “I’ve talked to him. He’s still got a lot going on and his spirits are great,” Stricker said, via Golfweek. “We were on a Zoom call with him just this last week and he seems like he’s in a better place. Like I said, though, he’s still got some ways to go.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    “I’d love to have him there. Who wouldn’t, right? The guys really respect him, and he did a great job obviously as a captain and he was an assistant captain of mine in 2017 at the Presidents Cup and he was unbelievable. He would do anything for you and he’s totally, totally vested in the situation and the process and almost to the point of he’s on it early and so much, it’s like, dude, we’ve still got months to go yet.”

    Woods has been recovering at his home in Florida after he was involved in a serious car crash in Los Angeles in February that left him with a devastating leg injury.

    Stricker said Woods made known that he could pick his brain during the Ryder Cup if need be.

    BRYSON DECHAMBEAU TALKS ABOUT BELIEF IN UFOS, CITES EXPERIENCE IN HIS OWN BACKYARD

    “That shows his level of commitment to me, to the team, and his desire to be there if he can be,” Stricker added. “As an assistant captain, it’s almost like he’s taken it up a notch. He can worry about the whole team where, when he’s a player, he’s just thinking about getting his own game ready so he can get those blinders on a little bit. But as an assistant captain, he is all-in with everybody and the players love it.

    “They love being around him and he adds a tremendous amount when he is there.”

    The Ryder Cup is a competition between U.S. and European golf teams. The event is held every two years. The 2020 competition was moved to 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic forcing a change in the golf schedule.

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    Whistling Straits in Wisconsin will be the host course Sept. 24 to 26. While the teams have yet to be officially determined, Stricker picked Jim Furyk, Zach Johnson and Davis Love III to be his vice-captains.

    Lindsey Vonn ‘praying’ for Tiger Woods after car crash

    Lindsey Vonn is “praying” for Tiger Woods after the legendary golfer was in a serious car crash Tuesday morning in Los Angeles.

    The Olympic skier tweeted Tuesday afternoon after the news broke.

    “Praying for TW right now,” she said along with a prayer hand emoji.

    Woods and Vonn dated from March 2013 to May 2015.

    TIGER WOODS IN SURGERY AFTER SERIOUS CRASH, FIRST-RESPONDERS NEEDED ‘JAWS OF LIFE’ TO REMOVE HIM

    “After nearly three years together, Tiger and I have mutually decided to end our relationship,” Vonn said at the time. “I will always cherish the memories that we’ve created together. Unfortunately, we both lead incredibly hectic lives that force us to spend a majority of our time apart. I will always admire and respect Tiger. He and his beautiful family will always hold a special place in my heart.”

    (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)” src=”https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2021/02/640/320/GettyImages-491898679.jpg?ve=1&tl=1″>

    Golfer Tiger Woods and ski racer Lindsey Vonn dated from March 2013 to May 2015.
    (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

    Woods was injured on Tuesday and needed to be extricated from his vehicle with the “jaws of life,” the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department said.

    Woods was the sole occupant in the crash near the Rolling Hills Estates and Rancho Palos Verdes neighborhoods of Los Angeles. Officials said the crash occurred at around 7:12 a.m. and the vehicle sustained “major damage.”

    Vonn is ‘praying’ for Woods after the legendary golfer was in a serious car accident Tuesday morning in Los Angeles.
    (Getty Images)

    CELEBRITIES REACT TO TIGER WOODS’ CAR CRASH: ‘PRAYERS UP FOR THE GOAT’

    Woods’ agent Mark Steinberg released a statement following the crash.

    “Tiger Woods was in a single-car accident this morning in California where he suffered multiple leg injuries. He is currently in surgery and we thank you for your privacy and support,” Steinberg said.

    Fox News’ Ryan Gaydos and Daniel Canova contributed to this report.

    Tiger Woods, John Daly and sons to participate in PNC Championship next month

    Tiger Woods and John Daly and their sons will be among the participants at the 2020 PNC Championship next month in Florida.

    Woods and his 11-year-old son Charlie will tee off against John Daly and his son L.J., among others, in the tournament being held in Orlando, Fla. The tournament will run from Dec. 17-20.

    DUSTIN JOHNSON WINS FIRST MASTERS, SETS COURSE RECORD

    “I can’t tell you how excited I am to be playing with Charlie in our first official tournament together. It’s been great watching him progress as a junior golfer and it will be incredible playing as a team together in the PNC Championship,” Woods said in a press release Thursday.

    Several big-time professional golfers will be playing with their sons during the tournament, including Mark Calcavecchia, David Duval, Jim Furyk, Padraig Harrington, Lee Janze, Tom Kite, Matt Kuchar, Tom Lehman, Bernhard Langer, Greg Norman, Mark O’Meara, Nick Price, Vijay Singh and Lee Trevino.

    JACK NICKLAUS DISMISSES TRUMP QUESTION AT THE MASTERS: ‘I DON’T THINK THIS IS THE PLACE FOR POLITICS’

    Gary Player will be playing with his grandson. Annika Sorenstam and Justin Thomas will be playing with their fathers.

    Langer, who was the oldest golfer to make the cut at the Masters recently, won the tournament last year with his son Jason.

    Charlie Woods is a young golf prodigy who is learning from the best. He has not received major exposure up to this point. Daly’s son had recently committed to play golf at the University of Arkansas.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    The tournament will be without fans but is expected to be livestreamed.

    Woods faces another Sunday at a major with little hope

    One day he couldn’t find enough fairways. The next day he couldn’t make any putts. The third day he couldn’t get close enough to make any putts.

    That leaves a fourth day for Tiger Woods, with little to play for in the PGA Championship.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    Eight shots behind going into the third round, Woods didn’t make a birdie until the 16th hole at Harding Park. That was followed by his best shot of the day, an approach from 209 yards to 5 feet for birdie on the 18th. And then it was time to sign for a 2-over 72 on Saturday, leaving him out of contention at another major.

    “It’s just like yesterday,” Woods said. “I just didn’t get anything going, and had to claw and fight to get my way back, and didn’t get anything going until the last few holes.”

    Woods finished an hour before the leaders teed off, and he was left with another Sunday at a major without much hope.

    His victory in the Masters last year was one of the most emotional ever for Woods, who endured a major knee surgery and four back surgeries since his previous one 11 years earlier.

    Since then, however, Woods has not been a factor in majors, with missed cuts at the PGA Championship and British Open last year, and a big deficit going into Sunday at the U.S. Open.

    Woods said it wouldn’t be difficult for him to get up for the final day at Harding Park, which until this week has brought only happy memories in his previous two experiences as a pro.

    “Get ready for the (FedEx Cup) playoffs, and we have the U.S. Open after that. We have some big events to be played,” he said. “And hopefully, tomorrow I can shoot something in the red and get it to under par for the tournament.”

    The PGA Championship is only his fourth tournament of the year, and his second in the last six months because of the pandemic that shut down golf from March to June.

    Woods used a new putter this week — adjustable weights in the sole and a little longer to allow him to practice longer without strain on his back — but he blamed the last two days on the guy using it.

    “I was frustrated that I didn’t get anything going early,” Woods said. “Wish I would have made the putts I did at the end. I was putting for pars, it seemed like, on a lot of the holes.”

    It wasn’t entirely a repeat of Friday, when Woods had three birdie chances of 10 feet or closer on the opening five holes and didn’t make any of them. On Saturday, he didn’t have many reasonable chances.

    Woods had only two birdie chances from inside 20 feet on the front nine — a miss from 18 feet on No. 2, and miss from just outside 15 feet from the fringe on the par-5 fourth. He had only three chances inside 20 feet on the back nine, converting the last two of them.

    It wasn’t enough.

    Woods talked about the noise — lack of it, with no spectators — as a new normal. Another new normal might be Woods not being a lock to contend every major he plays. His schedule is more limited than ever. His back is unpredictable. And he is 44, an age at which only six players have won majors.

    Only three times in nine majors has he had a chance going into Sunday since his return from a fourth back surgery — the 2018 British Open and PGA, and the 2019 Masters that he won. Age alone would suggest he doesn’t have many majors left to try to win at least three more to match Jack Nicklaus.

    “There’s not as many as when I first started playing,” he said. “The reality is that the golf courses are getting bigger. They are getting longer. The margin between making the cut and the lead is a lot smaller than it used to be — used to be sometimes 12 to 15 shots. Now we had, what, nine shots? It’s just different.

    “It’s getting tighter and it’s getting harder to win events.”

    Woods gets one more day at Harding Park, and then only one month before he gets a cracked at his next one at Winged Foot for the U.S. Open.

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