Tiger Woods has pleaded not guilty to DUI charges connected to his rollover crash in Florida last week.
Woods entered the plea on Tuesday, four days after he was hauled into custody following the collision in his hometown of Jupiter Island, Page Six reported.
The 50-year-old golf legend was allegedly driving his luxury Land Rover while under the influence at the time of the crash and had two hydrocodone pills stashed in his pocket, The Post previously reported.
The golfer allegedly told arresting officers that he had popped several pills earlier that morning.
“I had a few,” he allegedly replied when questioned if he’d taken any medication prior to the accident.
The golfing phenomenon was reportedly “lethargic and slow” and had dilated pupils and “bloodshot and glassy” eyes in the immediate aftermath of the crash.
He blew a negative on the breathalyzer and underwent field sobriety tests — but refused a urinalysis at the scene.
Woods was ultimately charged with driving under the influence with property damage and refusing a lawful test.
He reportedly waived his arraignment and demanded a jury trial for his latest DUI bust.
He once again retained Attorney Douglas Duncan, who represented the troubled golfer during his 2017 DUI legal battle.
The Post reached out to Duncan and Roth for comment, but Douglas Duncan was not immediately available Tuesday afternoon.
Follow The Post’s latest updates on Tiger Woods’ Florida car crash
Friday’s arrest isn’t the first time the embattled golfer has been slapped with a DUI charge.
Woods has been involved in at least three other crashes and Friday marked the second time he was charged with DUI.
Woods infamously plowed his Cadillac Escalade into a fire hydrant and collided with a tree on Thanksgiving 2009, after his then-wife, Elin Nordegren, uncovered his infidelities and chased him out of the house swinging a golf club.
In 2017, Woods was busted driving under the influence when he was found asleep behind the wheel with the engine running, the right blinker on, two flat tires, and light damage to the driver’s side.
Tests showed he had Vicodin, Dilaudid, Xanax, Ambien and THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, in his system at the time.
Four years later, in 2021, the crash-prone golfer had a near-death experience after he was involved in a high-speed, single-car collision in Los Angeles that fractured multiple bones in his legs, requiring immediate surgery.












