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    Tiger Woods needs wins for EA deal to make sense

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    Tiger Woods - Getty Images (Reuters) - Electronic Arts Inc has no immediate plans to drop Tiger Woods as the
    pitchman for its golf video games, but the world's former top golfer needs to get some wins under his belt, the video game publisher's top executive said on Monday.

    About a year ago, Woods was
    involved in an early morning auto accident that led to revelations about
    marital infidelities, the loss of up to $35 million in annual sponsorship revenue and divorce from his wife.

    Since then, Woods has not won a tournament and has lost his ranking as the
    world's No. 1 pro golfer, but EA has declined to abandon him. It even
    has plans to introduce a 2012 version of its Tiger Woods console video
    game next year, but EA Chief Executive John Riccitiello said Woods needs
    to end his losing streak.

    "This is no threat against Tiger," Ricitiello said at the Reuters Global Media Summit in New York. "We're with him because he has the promise of being the world's best golfer.

    "We have no plans to move away from him, but it's a business relationship
    on the basis of we make the best golf game and he's the best golfer," he
    added. "Both of those things need to be true in the long run for the
    partnership to make sense."

    EA recently launched a golf game on Facebook that did not carry Woods'
    name, but company executives said that had been the intention all along.
    Riccitiello said there are no plans to abandon the struggling golfer
    and adding games that don't carry Woods' name is being done to reach
    more gamers.

    "We're broadening the appeal of our golf business," he said.

    Woods' off-field problems do not worry EA, but Riccitiello acknowledged the
    golfer may never regain his previous level of dominance on the greens.

    Nevertheless, Woods' struggles have not cost EA anything and executives feel loyalty toward him, Ricitiello said.

    "He sort of stuck with us for a very long time and we made great business
    together," Riccitiello said, "and we're willing to give him the benefit
    of the doubt for a period of time."

    (Reporting by Ben Klayman in New York; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

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