Tiger Woods, Burj Al Arab, DUBAI, March 2, 2004
In sport, there are moments that blur the line between spectacle and competition, when an athlete steps beyond the usual arenas of play and enters a stage where performance becomes a piece of theatre.
One such moment came in the Spring of 2004, when Tiger Woods, already the most recognisable figure in golf and probably in sport, stood high above Dubai and struck golf balls from the rooftop helipad of the world’s only seven star hotel The Burj Al Arab.
Captured through the lens of the world’s leading golf photographer David Cannon, the image has endured as one of the most striking promotional shots in modern sport.
The setting was as dramatic as it was improbable. The Burj Al Arab, a sail-shaped marvel of engineering, rises more than 300 meters above the Arabian Gulf, its rooftop helipad a disk suspended seemingly in mid-air.
Built not as a golf tee box but as a landing platform for helicopters, it became at least for a day a golfer’s driving range. Woods, preparing for the 2004 Dubai Desert Classic at Emirates Golf Club, was invited to take part in this publicity event to mark his appearance at the tournament.
With the sea breeze cutting across the helipad and the city skyline stretching into the desert, the scene was both surreal and symbolic.
Woods, in his athletic prime at age 28, was more than just a competitor; he was the face of global golf. His swing, honed in practice ranges and fairways worldwide, now found an improbable backdrop: 700 feet above the water, no gallery of fans in sight, only the vast expanse of sky and sea to witness the flight of the ball.
David Cannon’s photograph freezes this marriage of sport and spectacle. In it, Woods is in mid-swing, balanced and composed, his figure dwarfed by the scale of the helipad yet commanding the scene with the power of his presence.
The geometry of the shot, the circular pad, the sharp lines of the hotel’s architecture, and the endless horizon frames Woods as both athlete and icon.
For Dubai, the moment was also emblematic of its growing ambition. In the early 2000s, the emirate was investing heavily in golf as part of its global sporting portfolio.
Hosting the Desert Classic drew elite players, but a stunt like this elevated the event into headlines far beyond the sports pages.
Woods, the world’s No. 1, hitting shots from one of the most photographed buildings in the world, created an instant image that spoke not only of golf but of Dubai’s rising stature.
Nearly two decades on, the picture retains its resonance. It is a reminder of the way sport can transcend its boundaries, how a simple act, hitting a golf ball, can be transformed into a symbol of daring, glamour, and global reach. For Tiger Woods, it was one of many memorable moments in a career defined by records and titles.
For Cannon, it was proof of photography’s power to turn an assignment into an enduring icon. And for golf, it was a day when the game quite literally rose above the course.