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Will Charlie Woods experience a fate similar to his father’s? Perhaps! However, for now, this fate isn’t about Tiger Woods‘ 15 major wins or his 82 PGA Tour victories. Instead, it’s about the controversy surrounding his father’s brand, Sun Day Red, since its launch. The debate intensified when Woods Jr. wore Nike shoes ahead of the final round at Augusta National instead of the white Sun Day Red kicks his father debuted on Thursday.

Recently, at the Adam Scott Junior Invitational, Woods Jr. and Jacob Trevor Immelman—son of Trevor Immelman, who held off Tiger Woods at the 2008 Masters—were paired together. Undoubtedly, it’s a great sight for both fathers to witness the next generation of golfers competing. However, the same cannot be said for fans on social media.

When @AJGAGolf shared a post on X showcasing both young talents, the post quickly went viral, sparking a heated debate in the comments section. The discussion primarily centered around Charlie Woods’ unique apparel, as he sported a Sun Day Red polo and a Titleist hat.

In addition to the design, the absurdly high costs and lack of the brand’s logo on the products have previously outraged customers. Fans’ criticism of the company continued during the 2024 PGA Championship, claiming that “Tiger Woods’ new clothing line is not sweat-resistant.” This occurred when the 48-year-old was spotted wearing a polo shirt from Sun Day Red. Sweat was pouring down his back, and his clothes had noticeable sweat stains on them. It appears the debate has now shifted towards the 15-year-old.

Charlie Woods

What do fans have to say about Charlie Woods’ attire?

A fan sarcastically commented, “Tiger has his first Sun Day Red athlete,” pointing toward the backlash the brand received for its design from the outset, and later, the high prices further fueled the controversy.

This fan expressed surprise with their comment: “Need someone to explain Charlie wearing a Titleist hat to me.” They highlighted the contrast of the 15-year-old wearing a polo from his father’s brand alongside a hat from a different one. They even brought another equipment brand into the equation and said, “TaylorMade owns a stake in Sun Day Red. I’m baffled!” emphasizing how the involvement of a famous golf brand like TaylorMade has not really helped in the success of the Tiger Woods brand among the masses.

One fan, Charlie Woods, would be a better fit as the face of Sun Day Red. They went on to offer a different perspective, and commented, If Charlie is the ambassador for Sun Day Red then I’ll buy. The outfit actually looks nice.” This fan made a comment not specifically about Sun Day Red but about the combination of different brands that the 15-year-old had donned and said, “Charlie wearing a Titleist hat? Looks odd.

One user sarcastically put forward the question, “How did Charlie get that shirt @SunDayRed?” One of the major criticisms that the Tiger Woods apparel brand faced was the expensive prices of the clothes and other products.

What do you think of Charlie Woods’ choice of unique attire? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Charlie Woods tees off during the final round of the PNC Championship golf tournament Sunday, Dec. 17, 2023, in Orlando, Fla. Charlie Woods, the 15-year-old son of Tiger Woods, is set to play in the Future Masters tournament this summer in Dothan. (AP Photo/Kevin Kolczynski, File)AP

Charlie Woods, son of golf legend Tiger Woods, is set to participate in the Press Thornton Future Masters tournament this summer in Dothan.

The 15-year-old Woods, with a listed hometown of Jupiter, Fla., is among 255 players entered in the 15-18 age group for the 75th annual tournament, which runs June 22-29 at Dothan Country Club. There are three other age groups: 13-14, 11-12 and 10-under, comprising nearly 500 golfers total.

Woods played in a U.S. Open qualifier last year, but failed to advance. He has played alongside his father in a number of events, including the 36-hole PNC championship each of the last four years.

The Future Masters has taken place every year since 1950, and bills itself as the “proving ground for future PGA champions.” Past winners in various age groups include U.S. Open champions Hubert Green and Jerry Pate, Masters champion Larry Mize and more recent standouts Stewart Cink, Robby Shelton and Nick Dunlap.

Charlie Woods is the only son of Tiger Woods, the 15-time PGA Tour major champion.

A 15-year-old stormed the Korn Ferry Tour and it wasn’t Charlie Woods. Miles Russell, a high school freshman like Woods Jr., made the record of being the youngest player to make the cut at any Korn Ferry Tour event. Russell’s success has also prompted the question: has Charlie Woods ever played in any KFT event? Or a PGA Tour-sanctioned event?

The first answer is no. Not yet, at least. But Woods Jr. has played at the PNC Championship, a Tour-sanctioned event, pairing up with his father. Not just that, Teenage Woods has already amassed a handful of titles under his belt despite not playing any Korn Ferry Tour event.

Charlie Woods’s career records

Woods Jr. has made impressive strides despite picking up interest late. He was more interested in soccer. In fact, Elin Nordegren was also spotted taking Charlie and Sam to soccer practice. However, Woods Jr. veered towards golf later, debuting with his pop at the 2020 PNC Championship.

Reportedly, Tiger Woods‘s 15-year-old son has a handicap of +3. Last year, Woods Jr. won the Notah Begay Hill Junior Golf Championship’s regional qualifier with his father looping for him. Although he couldn’t sniff victory at the National Championship, the teenager added another silverware a few months later.

Charlie Woods, in fact, one-upped his dad by netting the state championship victory with his school. He was part of the Benjamin Boys school team that won the Florida High School Athletic Association Class A state championship. Charlie shot 78 and 76, the fourth-best score on the five-man roster. This year, the 15-year-old has played only one Medalist Tour event so far, netting a T2 at Martin Downs.

Charlie Woods

In February, Charlie Woods made his American Junior Golf Association (AJGA) debut. Playing on a sponsor exemption, per TWLegion, the Benjamin School freshman carded 78, 81, and 78 in three rounds. He tied for the 31st spot, 28 shots off the lead. But before his AJGA debut, Woods Jr. made headlines for flirting with PGA Tour chances.

How did Charlie Woods fare at the PGA Tour Qualifier?

Charlie Woods tried his luck at the Florida pre-qualifier for the Cognizant Classic. His round went awry at par 4, 7th, where he carded a 12. Furthermore, the youngster was flooded with autograph and selfie requests, and fans stood way too close to the 15-year-old. Tiger Woods wasn’t present, as he was still recovering from influenza. Instead, Elin Nordegren accompanied her son.

Charlie Woods eventually carded an 86, missing the mark by 19 shots. His PGA Tour hopes were dashed. Should he want to qualify for a KFT event, he needs to target the eight slots available at the Monday qualifiers. Otherwise, a sponsor exemption will open the doors for him, as it did for Miles Russell.

Phil Mickelson is in all praise of the lefty sensation. Left-handed golfers appear to be a dwindling tribe in Golf. Miles Russell, though, shows hopes of being the new lefty star. The 15-year-old set a record by becoming the youngest player to make the cut at any Korn Ferry Tour event.

It was ‘cool’, he admitted yesterday. But Russell didn’t rest on his laurels. The high-school freshman has been under par in all three rounds and currently sits at T31. An impressive KFT debut for an amateur, who, like another famous 15-year-old, Charlie Woods, is also a 2027 graduate. But Russell’s amateur resume is far better than Woods Jr. And, his latest feat has caught the attention of the most famous left-handed golfer.

Phil Mickelson feels Russell is an incredible golfer

Phil Mickelson knows what it means to stack up against pros as an amateur. After all, Lefty won the Northern Telecom Open in 1991 as an amateur. So, when Miles Russell made the KFT cut, the 45-time PGA Tour winner tweeted, “Miles Russell, a 15 year old left handed golfer made the cut in this week’s Korn Ferry event. This is an amazing accomplishment. It’s great to see a young lefty playing such incredible golf.

Notably, Russell became the youngest champion of the Junior PLAYERS Championship last September. Prior to that, he notched a seven-stroke victory at the Junior PGA Championship. Russell was also part of the Junior Ryder Cup team. On top of that, the high school freshman was the youngest ever to earn the AJGA Boys Rolex Junior Player of the Year Award.

The record was previously held by 15-year-old Tiger Woods in 1991. Russell was ten months younger, however. Also of note, the AJGA No. 1 golfer has signed two NIL deals already, one with TaylorMade, which makes him the youngest golfer on the equipment giant’s roster. None of that is on Charlie Woods’s resume.

In fact, Russell was also in the Cognizant Classic pre-qualifier field. Both crashed out but Russell was T21, carding 2-under 70. Whereas, Woods Jr. posted 86. Arguably, teenage Woods has a distance to cover. But Phil Mickelson has been generous with young and rising stars before. He has praised Charlie Woods as well.

Charlie Woods

Mickelson chose Woods Jr. over his close competitor? 

Back in 2021, the video of Charlie Woods and Tiger Woods swinging a club side-by-side went viral. Lefty though, liked teenage Woods’s swing better than his 15-time major champion pop. Phil Mickelson tweed, “I like Charlie’s recoil better,” with a laughing emoji. Actually, the three-time Masters winner has never shied away from encouraging the juniors.

When Nick Dunlap won the American Express, Mickelson was one of the first few LIV Golfers to congratulate the University of Alabama product. The 53-year-old tweeted, “Such an impressive performance by Nick Dunlap. Congratulations on an incredible win. This is just the beginning.

Lefties are a minority in the golf world. Mike Weir was the first left-handed golfer to win the Masters. Bubba Watson has two. And Lefty, of course, has the most decorated Augusta National resume among all three. Naturally, for Miles Russel, earning a thumbs up from the greatest left-handed golfer to ever play is a worthy recognition of his achievements.

AUGUSTA, Ga.—After admitting his terrible warmup session on Saturday transferred over to his third round, leading to Tiger Woods’ worst Masters round ever, the five-time green jacket winner leaned on some outside help on Sunday: His son Charlie.

Ahead of his final round, the 15 year-old Charlie was serving as Tiger’s instructor on the range, and seemed to key-in on one drill in particular.

Charlie held a club out in front of Tiger as he swung though, identical to a drill the legendary instructor Butch Harmon used to do with Tiger, which you can see below.

The goal of this drill is to prevent Tiger’s arms from flinging too far out to the right. When his arms do that, they disconnect too much from his body turn on the way through and can cause the clubface to flip over. So, the only way Tiger can avoid smashing into the club is turning the club more around him.

That’s why, at various other points, you could spot Charlie trying to illustrate the feel of turning his hips more back and through.

Since his injuries, Tiger often struggles with that kind of lower body mobility. when he doesn’t load enough on the backswing, he can’t turn through aggressively enough on the downswing. His arms take over, and his consistency struggles. It’s what makes loading and unloading such a primary focus for Tiger during his swing.

A couple of father-son swing thoughts, to get Tiger going during his final round.

Being Tiger Woods‘ son bestowed Charlie Woods with popularity. But the privilege had demerits of its own. A lot of social media coverage and sometimes dealing with unruly fans could take a toll on a young golfer. Most importantly, expecting little Woods to follow in his father’s footsteps or repeat such golf history had been a lot to ask for.

Recently, rowdy fans troubled Charlie in a pre-qualifying round at the Palm Beaches. The 15-year-old shot 86 in the 18-hole event in a failed attempt to qualify for the Cognizant Classic. During the qualifying tournament, he was bothered a lot by the intervening crowd. Let’s take a look at what happened at the venue.

Charlie Woods got bothered in a pre-qualifying round

The PGA Tour sent a Getty Images photographer to cover Charlie Woods right from the moment he started playing at Palm Beaches. This could be quite distracting for a teenager like him who was trying to focus. As per reports, a lot of fans gathered at the pre-qualifier. Moreover, it was unlikely to see such a crowd at events like this, and it can be too much to deal with. The caricatures did not stop there; men were hiding behind the bushes to grab a drive and people were going too close to the Woods Jr. due to the fewer ropes in the pre-qualifiers. Spectators were also seen arguing with the official when they were asked to be behind the line.

There was plenty of talk that Charlie Woods would be playing the same tees as John Daly at last year’s PNC Championship before the decision being corrected, but this time Tiger Woods’ son has indeed been moved back with some of the bigger hitters.

Woods Jnr will play from the 6,500+ yard tees at Orlando’s Ritz Carlton Golf Club this week, which are the same tees that the likes of John Daly, Nelly Korda, Vijay Singh and Retief Goosen will be hitting from.

The 14-year-old will likely be hitting the ball much further than last year and, although we have no data on his driving distance, we’d hazard a guess it’s somewhere between 250-270 yards considering John Daly has averaged 282 yards this year and Nelly Korda 269 yards.

“For the @PNCchampionship Charlie Woods will be moving back a tee from last year,” the Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

All of the male PGA Tour players will be off the backs this week, measuring over 7,100 yards, including Tiger Woods who makes his second appearance since undergoing ankle surgery in April.

Woods finished 18th in the four-day Hero World Challenge earlier this month, where he seemed very happy with how his body held up with the demand of 72-holes and walking – crucially this week he’ll be allowed a cart for the 36-hole event.

“I haven’t done it in a while, I haven’t done it with my ankle the way it is now and I was excited each and every day to kind of get through it and kind of start piecing rounds together again,” Woods said after the Hero World Challenge final round.

Charlie Woods

“I haven’t done this in a long time so it was fun to feel that again. Every day I got faster into the round. The first day took me a while to get a handle on it, second day was faster, today was right away.

“And that’s eventually, when I play on a regular basis, that’s normally how it is. It takes me usually during warmup before I get a feel for the round. To be honest, that first day took me a while.”

Team Woods make their fourth appearance at the PNC Championship, having finished T8th last year, 2nd in 2021 and 7th in 2020. Vijay and Qass Singh are this week’s defending champions.

Tiger Woods made his return to golf two weeks ago at the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas, and now he’s back to headline the PNC Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Orlando, Florida.

The 15-time major champion is playing in the 36-hole two-day scramble event with his son, Charlie.

NEWS:-Charlie Woods Gets One Over On Tiger By Winning Title His Dad Never Did

In 2021, Team Woods finished runner-up to Vijay Singh and his son, Qass. And last year, even though Charlie was playing hurt, the Woods boys finished T-8 after rounds of 59-65.

NEWS:-Tiger Woods describes Charlie Woods’ development as duo prepare for latest PNC Championship appearance

Before the Hero, Tiger spent some time caddying for Charlie at the Notah Begay III Junior Golf National Championship.

Check out some of the best photos of Tiger and Charlie at the PNC Championship below:

Tiger Woods and Charlie WoodsTiger Woods and Charlie WoodsTiger Woods and Charlie WoodsTiger Woods and Charlie Woods

A lot has changed about golf since Tiger Woods and his son, Charlie, started playing the PNC Championship three years ago. A lot has changed with them, too.

Woods — at the time, one year removed from his improbable 2019 Masters victory — had his car accident at the beginning of 2021 and has undergone multiple surgeries since then, only playing intermittently throughout. Charlie has changed the most, though. Gone is the child who hit it as far as he possibly could and talked trash to Justin Thomas.

“I can’t quite give him as much grief anymore because he’s close to beating me up,” said Thomas. “Yeah, it’s impressive from a golfer standpoint because he’s still, what, 14. He’s still a 14-year-old but maturing in the sense of his golf game, and he’s more willing to learn and he’s open to it at times, obviously.

“It’s cool. He won the state championship with the guys. That’s really cool, I think playing on the high school team has been very beneficial for him. And yeah, I’m just glad he keeps moving back tee markers. He’s leading the tournament in inches grown.”

ORLANDO – 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.”

Very relatable.

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.

Tiger Woods and Charlie Woods

“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.”

Imagine that.