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Tiger Woods, the father, isn’t that different from you or me. The 15-time major champ and father of two doesn’t like when son, Charlie, stares at his phone all the time.

“Put your phone away and just look around. That’s one of the things that I think all parents struggle with is most kids don’t look up anymore. Everyone is looking down,” he said when asked to name a pet peeve or something Charlie does that gets under his skin. “Look around you, the world is so beautiful around you, just look up. But everyone is staring into a screen, and that’s how people view life. It drives me nuts at times because he’s always looking down and there’s so many things around you that are so beautiful at the same time.”

Charlie Woods

Watching Tiger in dad mode has made Tiger more relatable than ever. Golf fans have watched Charlie, 14, grow up in front of our eyes at the PNC Championship, a 36-hole two-person scramble that begins on Saturday at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club. And grow he has the last four years.

“You can see how much he’s grown from last year. It’s amazing how much he has grown, has changed, and it’s a moving target with him, right? He’s grown somewhere near four inches this year, so his swing has changed, it’s evolved, clubs have evolved,” Tiger said. “And we kept trying to adjust things, and it’s been a lot of fun. But it’s also challenging for him because each and every couple weeks, things change. He just has – he’s growing so fast.”

“He’s leading the tournament in inches grown,” Justin Thomas said. “I can’t quite give him as much grief anymore because he’s close to beating me up.”

Tiger noted that Charlie is hitting it past him now, and just to keep things fair in this 36-hole competition, he’s playing one set back this year at a length of 6,576 yards.

Imagine trying to grow up as the son of one of, if not, the best ever to play a sport. And yet Charlie has fallen hard for golf and seems to be able to handle all of the inevitable comparisons. Imagine being able to learn the game from Tiger. Well, Charlie still has some mixed feelings about that. When Will McGee, the 12-year-old son of Annika Sorenstam, asked him if he listens to his dad’s tips, Charlie said, “It doesn’t happen very often. I mean, when I get desperate, yeah.

“Sometimes he doesn’t see it the way I saw it, which is fun, but I think it’s the understanding of how to hit the proper shot at the proper time. And that’s what all kids have to learn is when do I hit a certain shot at the right time, or how do I take stuff off a shot, how do I hit it a little bit harder, what do I need to do.

“You can do that at home all you want, but under tournament conditions, it’s just so different. And being able to share that with him, share my experiences with him in game-time mode, I think that it was great for both of us because I think we both are able to learn from it and grow from it. I think I learned to be a better teacher with it, and I think that he became a better player because of it.”

Imagine there being a blessing in disguise from Tiger’s accident. His injuries have prevented him from practicing as much as he’d like with Charlie but on the bright side he said he has been home more and able to watch Charlie’s high school matches and caddie for him at junior tournaments, which he might not otherwise have been able to do. This week is special for Team Woods to test their games together under tournament conditions.

“We push each other, which is great,” Tiger said. “And the needle is always out. If you’re going to be able to mouth off and give the jabs, then you have to be able to take it. That’s been a lot of fun for both of us.”

Imagine being able to get a wedge lesson from the legend Lee Trevino. After the pro-am, Charlie hit the range and when Tiger joined him, they made sure to visit with Trevino, who was digging it out of the dirt at age 84 at the far end of the range. They hugged, laughed, and traded stories and tips.

Imagine if Tiger and Charlie were to win the PNC Championship this week. JT has and he took a guess where it would rank for Tiger. “It would be No. 1 for special,” he said.

“Winning majors is unbelievable, and how he’s won his majors, but seeing how much he cares about Charlie and having Sam out here and him doing that together with Charlie and as he’s watched him grow up, it would be a very, very different kind of win that doesn’t maybe come with the record books and history and whatnot,” Thomas added. “I know it would suck for us because they would really rub that in our face.”

Even a world-famous golfer has a relatable problem when dealing with kids: Their cell phone usage.

Tiger Woods, 48, was asked Friday if there’s a pet peeve he has as it relates to his son, Charlie, 14, who is playing with him this weekend at the PNC Championship.

“Is there anything fun or humorous that gets under your skin about him?’’ Woods was asked.

“I just don’t like the fact that he stares at his phone all the time,’’ Woods said. “Put your phone away and just look around. That’s one of the things that I think all parents struggle with is most kids don’t look up anymore. Everyone is looking down.

“Look around you, the world is so beautiful around you, just look up. But everyone is staring into a screen, and that’s how people view life. It drives me nuts at times because he’s always looking down and there’s so many things around you that are so beautiful at the same time.”

Team Woods is set to tee off at 8:22 a.m. on Saturday alongside Justin and Mike Thomas, hopefully with no phones in sight.

A person’s firsts are engraved in their memory forever. It is alleged that Charlie Woods is now a part of Greyson’s pack. This is Junior Woods’s first deal, and surely it’ll remain close to his heart. This has also drawn the golf fraternity’s attention to his father’s first deal, which undoubtedly played an important role in his life.

Tiger Woods’s first brand collaboration was with Nike, his controversial partner of almost three decades. As the golf town gets bombarded with rumors of a possible split between the two giants, a deep dive into the two would reveal how it all started.

Rewinding the reels of history on Tiger Woods’s and Nike’s meet-cute

It all started when Tiger Woods turned pro at the age of 20 and took over the golf world with his calculated drives. Nike was not far behind in spotting this talent and shortly signed a deal that would later translate into one of golf’s most lucrative endorsement contracts with the emerging star. This is when the decades-long relationship between the two sports giants took off.

Their first encounter was when Phil Knight, the then-CEO of Nike, signed a $40 million five-year contract with the then-turned-pro at the age of 20. What followed were several contracts that were renewed and renegotiated over the decades. During all those years of collaboration between the two, Nike has reportedly paid $500 million to the five-time major champion.

Charlie Woods

However, things do not seem to be as jolly as this almost dreamy story between Nike and Tiger Woods, which has hit a bumpy road. Speculations of a possible split have engulfed the golf world in the last few months. The golf world then took the fifteen-time major winner’s son, Charlie Woods, not following in his father’s footsteps with a grain of salt.

PGA, Golf Herren WGC – Bridgestone Invitational – Second Round, Aug 3, 2018 Akron, OH, USA A view of the Nike golf shoes worn by Tiger Woods as he putts on the sixth green during the second round of the WGC – Bridgestone Invitational golf tournament at Firestone Country Club – South Course. Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports, 03.08.2018 15:25:50, 11018194, Bridgestone Invitational, NPStrans, Tiger Woods, PGA, South Course, Second Round, Firestone Country Club PUBLICATIONxINxGERxSUIxAUTxONLY Copyright: xAaronxDosterx 11018194

As the 14-year-old sensation goes on to have signed his first deal more than half a decade before his father did, his ‘ditching Nike’ move has added fire to the fuel of a predicted split between his father and the billion-dollar market giant. But who exactly welcomed CW to the Greyson pack and became the Phil Knight of his success story?

Charlie Woods gets welcomed to Greyson Clothiers.

Junior Woods was recently welcomed to the Greyson Clothiers family by Larry Fitzgerald, one of the most valuable people on board with the brand. The NFL sensation posted the news of Tiger Woods’s son joining the pack on his Instagram account, which then led to a series of speculations in the golf world.

Even though Charlie Woods has not formally commented on the matter, Greyson Clothiers, a brand with a vision to create a fusion between fashion and functionality, has affirmed Fitzgerald’s proclamation by reposting a welcome to Charlie Woods. However, the post was later deleted, leaving the entire golf world to make wild guesses!

Tiger Woods’ son, Charlie, just accomplished a feat on the golf course his legendary father didn’t this week.

Woods, along with his The Benjamin School teammates, won the Florida state high school golf championship.

Woods shot 78-76 in the two days of the FHSAA Class A state championship on Wednesday at Mission Inn Resort and Club in Howey-In-The-Hills, Florida.

The Benjamin School, located in Palm Beach Gardens, had five total golfers in the tournament, including the 14-year-old freshman in Woods. He finished tied-26th overall.

But The Benjamin School is no stranger to winning it all, as this was its fourth state title.

Jake Valentine, a sophomore at the private day school, scored birdie on the 17th hole on day two of the tournament as well as a putt on the final hole to clinch the title for The Benjamin School. He shot 72-76 to lead his squad to victory.

The elder Woods was among the gallery watching the state title play out. There was a moment caught on video, too, of his son holing out a chip just off a green that featured a typical Woods fist pump and reaction.

Charlie Woods

As a high schooler himself, Woods was never able to collect a high school state title while at Western High School in Anaheim, California. However, state golf championships were not instituted while Woods was in high school, so there is a caveat here.

Obviously, though, his son has a lot to live up to considering Woods became the youngest golfer to ever win the U.S. Junior Amateur title, which he won in 1991. He would win it two more times before going on to his illustrious pro career.

But Charlie Woods is clearly in love with the sport, and his father admitted he has started to out-drive him when they play together.

Perhaps one day the next generation of Woods will be on the PGA Tour wreaking havoc to the competition as his father did for years. He’s already loving that winning feeling now in high school.

Will Charlie Woods be the next Tiger Woods? Dare we ask if he’ll ever win as many major championships as dear ol’ dad?

Charlie hits it a mile and employs an athletic and fundamentally sound swing, as well as many of his father’s on-course mannerisms.

But if you know golf and know its history, well, let’s just say Charlie will most likely win as many major championships as your ol’ man.

Maybe that’s a bit harsh. It’s not like second-generation golfers haven’t succeeded at the highest levels. Come on, it was just 130-some years ago that Willie Park Jr. won his second British Open and ran the combined total for father and son to six.

That was just 15 years after another second-generation champ, Young Tom Morris, won his fourth.

Charlie Woods

So, yes, we’re saying there’s a chance.

Charlie Woods has drawn plenty of praise for his golf game over the past few years, most recently at the annual silly season tournament, the PNC Championship in Orlando, where he and his dad tied for fifth in a field of 20 teams.

This came a month after Charlie’s high school team won the Class 1A state championship. Charlie tied for 19th individually with rounds of 78-76.

At 14, he’s a quality high school golfer. But at this stage there’s no way to know if that’ll eventually translate to a professional career in golf or, say, professional life as a lawyer or banker with a single-digit handicap and occasional use of the “Reserved for Club Champion” parking spot down at the club.

Jack Nicklaus is the standard by which Tiger Woods has long been measured. Of Jack’s four sons and one daughter, Gary was the best golfer. When he was just 16 and playing for the same school Charlie Woods now attends, Sports Illustrated put him on the cover with the headline, “The Next Nicklaus.”

Not quite. Gary did reach the PGA Tour and stayed a few years, which is no small feat, but the closest he came to becoming the “Next Nicklaus” was a playoff loss to Phil Mickelson at the 2000 BellSouth Classic.

Just ten father-son combos have won PGA Tour tournaments: Julius and Guy Boros, Al and Brent Geiberger, Craig and Kevin Stadler, Bob and Kevin Tway, Joe Kirkwood Sr. and Jr., Jack Burke Sr. and Jr., Clayton and Vance Heafner, Jay and Bill Haas, Old Tom Morris and Young Tom Morris and Willie Park and Willie Park, Jr.

The number of second-generation tournament winners seems a bit low when you consider how many second- and even third-generation stars you see in other sports. One reason seems rather obvious. In team sports, where you get a Ken Griffey Jr. or a Christian McCaffrey, the son of a former pro, especially a former star, is likely to get more consideration and more reps at an early age, and therefore more opportunities to succeed.

Yes, genetics also help.

But in golf and the other individual sports, results tell the story. It doesn’t matter how much cachet your name carries. Sure, the name will help a fledgling pro get a sponsor invite into a tournament field here and there, and one of those opportunities might trigger a breakthrough. But most likely, if the professional quality is there, you’re not leaning on sponsor invites very long.

Charlie Woods is obviously set up to go as far as his talent and desire allow — the best equipment, access to the best practice facilities and courses, and a pretty fair instructor across the dinner table.

That instructor defied a lot of odds along the way and did many things never considered likely, and some things never thought possible. Odds and history, however, also pack a formidable punch.

Charlie Woods burst onto the national golf stage three years ago when, at age 11, he joined his father Tiger in playing the PNC Championship. This marks the fourth consecutive time Team Woods has competed at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club to end the year.

Over that span we’ve seen Charlie make his first eagle, shape shots both ways, display a mighty recoil with his driver and drain long birdie putts all while displaying many of the same mannerisms we’ve seen from his Hall of Fame father over the past 25 years. This year, now 14, Charlie stepped back a tee and is playing from the same distance as the likes of John Daly, Jim Furyk, Nelly Korda, Vijay Singh and Steve Stricker.

“I think his speed has gone dramatically up since last year,” Tiger said when assessing Charlie’s game. “But I think that more than anything, it’s just the fact that he’s grown so fast. The aches and pains of growing, just teenage life.”

Charlie is bigger and stronger. On Saturday during the first round, he carried a drive 320 yards, with the ball ending just over the back of the green on the par-4 12th hole.

Charlie Woods

 

“I sort of didn’t have the speed that he has at that age,” Tiger said. “But also, I didn’t have the equipment, either. The equipment is so different.”

One thing that is difficult to quantify from watching Charlie on television each year is how his skills compare with other junior golfers in the country. He’s seen alongside the most famous golfer on the planet hitting great golf shots, and annually, whether on social media or from people in the gallery, there are those who contend that he’ll have a long successful PGA Tour career and even potentially win major championships like his old man.

 

Tiger Woods and his 14-year-old child, Charlie, warmed up with some flop shots on Friday morning ahead of Saturday’s Pro-Am event at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Orlando, Florida. The father-son duo will compete at the PNC Championship for a fourth consecutive year.

Charlie hit a flop shot that made Tiger, 47, proudly quit the warmup with a huge smile on his face. The official X account for PGA Tour shared a video of the moment.

“We’re ending on that one right there. That was f—ing nasty,” Tiger said. “F—ing nasty.”

Tiger Woods and Charlie to face old rivals

Tiger and Charlie will face Justin Thomas and his father Mike in the first two rounds of the Pro-Am tournament. Tee off is scheduled for 8:22 a.m. ET on Saturday.

Charlie Woods

The rivalry on the golf course does not translate to real life as Justin and Charlie have become like brothers despite the 16-year age gap.

Rickie Fowler has been playing golf since the age of three, and he now claims that parents caddying for their children might not be the perfect scenario. The 7x PGA Tour was accompanied by his mother to the golf course for practice but was never guided by her on every step. As Bleacher Report reported, he is a self-taught golfer.

The recent statement on Fowler on parents becoming caddies for the children sheds light on a famous golf parent-child duo, Tiger Woods and Charlie Woods. Fowler further expressed how it may hinder the natural growth needed to become a better golfer.

Rickie Fowler makes a bold confession about parents caddying for their children

Recently, Rickie Fowler made the headlines when his 11-year-old partnership with Farmers Insurance came to an end. Subsequently, the 31-year-old opted out from the Farmers Insurance Open. Meanwhile, he made his latest appearance on a podcast.

Charlie Woods

Talking on the I Can Fly podcast’s recent episode, Fowler relayed the current scenario at the Junior level. The Cal golfer started by narrating his story of playing with her mother, who used to carry him to the courses. However, the parents were never allowed on the greens and were never paired with their children or in the same group.

On the contrary, nowadays, parents are more involved in the careers of their children. While Fowler agreed that parents are there to support them, there was never any push to pursue golf. However, as he has observed at the junior level, parents are starting to caddie for their children. He said, “Parents caddying in and I just feel like I don’t know if it’s the right way, Fowler felt that being alone without a parent helps in learning and growing up on one’s own.

Furthermore, he explained, “I feel like there’s so much that I learned and you learn growing up from, you know, you kind of figure out instead of someone telling you what to do or how to do it.” The 2023 Rocket Mortgage Classic winner recently came to with another bold confession about doing the unconventional this year.

Rickie Fowler doesn’t want to be a “billboard” golfer

Recently, Rickie Fowler parted ways with Farmers Insurance, and his other sponsor, Rocket Mortgage, has not renewed the contract yet, though it was said to be renewed soon. Now, during the process, Fowler gave an interview with Golfweek talking about what he wanted for his future.

Fowler expressed the importance of time and surrounding himself with right-minded people. He said, “I don’t want to be a billboard or NASCAR driver type of thing, but I do want to have a good, core group of partners.” The 35-year-old wants to bring something new to his game.

What’s the new thing and who are the new set of partners for Fowler remains to be disclosed. Till then, the player would be practicing for his next adventure at PGA National Resort for the new Cognizant Classic.

Phil Mickelson and Jon Rahm both know good golf when they see it.

The two LIV Golf stars sent their congratulations to Nick Dunlap on Sunday evening, as the 20-year-old University

of Alabama sophomore became the first amateur since 1991 to win on the PGA Tour.

Mickelson, of course, was the last amateur player to do so—he won the Northern Telecom Open in Tucson, Arizona, as a 20-year-old sophomore at Arizona State.

“Such an impressive performance by Nick Dunlap,” Mickelson posted on X. “Congratulations on an incredible win. This is just the beginning.”

Meanwhile, Rahm echoed Mickelson’s sentiments by saying that Dunlap has a bright future ahead.

“What an amazing accomplishment by @NickDunlap62, stellar play and way to pull through under pressure to join a very selective group of players to win PGA tour events as an amateur!” Rahm posted on X.

“Great future ahead of this great talent! Congratulations.”

Phil mickelson

Dunlap undoubtedly has incredible talent, which was also on full display at last year’s U.S. Amateur. Dunlap defeated Neal Shipley 4 & 3 at Cherry Hills Country Club in August to join Tiger Woods as the only two players to win both the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Junior Amateur.

And now, Dunlap has company with Mickelson after winning The American Express.

Considering Woods and Mickelson have combined to win 21 major championships since 1997, Dunlap now has elite company.

And yet, it is refreshing to see two LIV golfers recognize Dunlap’s accomplishment and talent. Even though a deal between the PGA Tour, DP World Tour, and Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF) seems imminent, plenty of hostility still exists between each circuit. But at the end of the day, good golf is good golf, and Dunlap played better than anyone this past weekend. Thankfully, that was recognized by all.

Tiger Woods’ two kids are his biggest fans — on and off the course!

The golf champion, who shares Sam Alexis, 16, and Charlie Axel, 14, with ex-wife Elin Nordegren, has opened up in the past about the importance of fatherhood and having his kids by his side.

Back in 2015, when both kids were able to join their dad for his showing at the Masters Tournament, Tiger said having them there was a “full circle moment.”

“This tournament means so much to me in so many different ways,” he said at a news conference per ESPN. “We all know what happened in ’97 with my dad’s health, and he was pronounced, well, he was dead at one point earlier that year; came back, and then came here and I won the Masters. To now have come full circle and to have a chance to have my kids out there and be able to share that with them, it’s special.”

From being little ones on the sidelines, to playing golf right alongside him, here are some of the sweetest moments shared between Tiger and his two kids.

Bring It In

Charlie Woods

Tiger Woods shared a sweet moment with his two little ones Sam and Charlie at the 2015 Masters Tournament in Augusta, Georgia. Sam complemented her dad’s hot pink polo in one of her own while her little bro sported a bright orange hoodie.

Proud Dad

Sam looked as cute as can be in her dad’s arms on the sidelines of a Stanford Cardinal football game in 2009 — where Tiger, an alumnus, was serving as an honorary captain.

Two Cheers!

Tiger and his son were truly in sync as they cheered on Rafael Nadal from the stands of the 2019 US Open in N.Y.C.

Tennis Fans

And Charlie isn’t the only one who has enjoyed some tennis alongside Dad. In 2015, Sam and Tiger took their seats in Nadal’s box at the US Open at USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center to watch the star face off against Fabio Fognini.

Biggest Fan