Has Tiger Woods ever publicly mentioned CBD or cannabis products for pain management?
Executive summary
There is no reliable reporting in the provided results showing Tiger Woods himself has publicly endorsed or said he uses CBD or cannabis for pain management; instead a long-running scam and numerous fake “Tiger Woods CBD Gummies” product pages falsely attach his name to CBD products (examples of scam and fake pages: sportskeeda and many spoof product sites) [1] [2]. Multiple created sites promote “Tiger Woods CBD Gummies” and repeat claims Woods used CBD after injuries, but Sportskeeda reports Woods was never associated with the product and that the product never existed [1] [3].
1. Deepfake product marketing, not a clean celebrity endorsement
Scores of promotional pages, shop fronts and fan‑style blogs present “Tiger Woods CBD Gummies” as if Woods endorsed or used them; those pages make direct claims that CBD reduces joint pain and that Woods used it after surgeries [4] [5] [6]. Investigative reporting compiled in Sportskeeda, however, concludes those claims are false: Woods was never associated with the product and the “Tiger Woods CBD Gummies” campaign appears to be a scam built from fake reviews and dozens of bogus social pages [1]. That disconnect — many marketing pages vs. a single report saying the association is fabricated — is the central fact of the record in these sources [1].
2. Repeated product pages recycle the same narrative
Independent sites and template storefronts reproduce identical copy about pain relief, anti‑inflammatory benefits and athlete recovery, claiming Tiger Woods used CBD as part of his recovery toolkit [2] [7] [8]. Those pages cite CBD’s putative benefits — reduced pain, improved mobility, anti‑inflammatory effects — but they do so in product‑marketing language and do not provide verifiable primary quotes from Woods or his representatives [4] [9]. Available sources do not mention any direct quote from Tiger Woods endorsing CBD.
3. Sportskeeda’s account: scammers capitalized on Woods’ injuries
Sportskeeda documents that scammers created more than 30 Facebook pages and numerous fake Twitter accounts to promote the gummies, and that many of the “reviews” were fabricated; the article specifically says Woods never promoted the product and that the marketed product itself never existed [1]. That investigation directly contradicts the product pages’ implication of a legitimate celebrity endorsement [1].
4. Some summaries assert Woods “openly discussed” using CBD — but trace to the same dubious sources
A few curated pages repeat the line that “Woods openly discussed using CBD as part of his recovery toolkit,” presenting that as an argument for legitimacy [3]. Those claims appear to be restatements of the marketing narrative rather than citations of primary interviews or press releases by Woods. The available sources do not include any verifiable interview, press statement, or reputable news coverage in which Tiger Woods personally says he used CBD or cannabis for pain management; therefore that claim is not supported by the documents provided (not found in current reporting).
5. Two competing narratives in the available record
Narrative A (marketing sites): Tiger Woods used CBD and his name adds credibility to products that relieve pain and inflammation [4] [2]. Narrative B (investigative reporting): The “Tiger Woods CBD Gummies” story is a scam that misuses his name; there’s no association and no real product tied to him [1]. The sources show marketing pages overwhelmingly push Narrative A; Sportskeeda and some aggregator commentary push Narrative B and call out the fraud [1] [3].
6. What this means for a reader seeking the truth
The preponderance of pages claiming a Woods link are commercial or templated marketing properties without primary sourcing; Sportskeeda’s investigative piece explicitly disputes the endorsement and documents scam tactics [1]. Given that conflict and the absence of any primary quote or reputable mainstream news coverage in these materials, the responsible conclusion from the supplied sources is that Tiger Woods has not been shown in this record to have publicly endorsed or discussed CBD or cannabis for pain management [1]. Any assertion to the contrary in the supplied set should be treated as marketing, not verified reporting [2].
Limitations and next steps
This analysis relies solely on the supplied search results. If you want a definitive public record check, consult primary mainstream news archives, Woods’ official representatives, or transcripts of his interviews; those sources are not included here and therefore not assessed in this report (not found in current reporting).