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Golf fans who have been following the growth of Charlie Woods, the son of Tiger Woods, may have been wondering where and if the golf star-in-the-making would play at the high school level.

The Benjamin School, located in Palm Beach Gardens, was the lucky winner and has reaped benefits from his prowess already.

After clinching the West Coast High School Tournament, hosted by the South Florida PGA Junior Tour, on Saturday afternoon, the Buccaneer boys golf team is well on its way to what it hopes will be a fourth state championship with the 14-year-old freshman prodigy.

Charlie was the two-day tournament’s individual champ at Cypress Woods Golf and Country Club in Naples.

Seniors Aiden Miller and Tyler Bruneau tied for second, as Luke Wise came in fourth. Travis Robertson, another Benjamin senior, shot two over before withdrawing.

Tiger Woods and Charlie Woods

Charlie’s performance marks his second low-round outing since the weekend prior at the Notah Begay III Junior Golf National Championship Last Chance Florida Regional, held at the Mission Inn Resort in Howey-in-the-Hills, where Benjamin will head for the high school state championship tournament this fall.

With Tiger caddying and final scores of 71 and 66 − a second round highlighted by nine birdies to tie his career-best − Charlie won the junior regional qualifier in the boys 14-15 age division to advance to the national championship in Coushatta, Louisiana.

The event, set to begin on Nov. 4, will conclude on Nov. 6, which is the same day Florida High School Athletic Association golf state championships kick off before teams and individual champions are determined on Nov. 15.

Last Sunday in a post-match interview, after shaving two strokes from his 2022 tournament scorecard of 68, Charlie only had positive reviews of Mission Inn Resort’s El Campeon course.

Woods told tournament host Ryan Burr: “This course is great for me.”

Charlie Woods

High school rules and regulations may keep dad off the bag when Charlie’s inaugural run at a varsity state championship comes in November. However, the Bucs can feel confident with a well-tenured “rookie” in the lineup.

Brooks Koepka has had a spectacular career in professional golf, but there is no doubt that his run through the Majors has been on another level. At the age of 33, he has won five Majors, but he feels he has enough talent and energy to achieve many more.

Recently, Brooks Koepka was asked to give his opinion on how many Majors he could win in his career. This happened on Baltusrol’s Fore Play podcast, where Koepka was a guest this Sunday.

Brooks Koepka’s answers were surprising, and he made it clear that surpassing Tiger Woods is “the benchmark”.

tige rwoods

Here’s what Brooks Koepka said on the Fore Play podcast:

About the chance of beating Tiger Woods, he added:

“I hope so, that’d be great right? That was the benchmark, 14 ’till I give him 15.”

Between 2017 and 2019, Koepka won four Majors. He had to wait four years to win another Major. That happened at the 2023 PGA Championship.

What is Brooks Koepka’s record in Majors?

Brooks Koepka’s Major victories came at the 2018, 2019 and 2023 PGA Championships and the 2017 and 2018 U.S. Open. But the quality he has shown in these tournaments is not limited to his victories.

Koepka has played in 39 editions of Majors and has missed the cut only five times (he withdrew from The Open in 2020). In addition to his five victories, he has 13 top-10s, including four runner-up finishes.

These second places were the ones he referred to in the interview above. The first of these was at The Masters in 2019, where he lost by one stroke to Tiger Woods despite finishing tied with Dustin Johnson and Xander Schauffele.

tige rwoods

Koepka’s second runner-up finish was at the 2019 U.S. Open, where he lost by three strokes to Gary Woodland. His third was at the 2021 PGA Championship, where he lost by two shots to Phil Mickelson. He finished tied with Louis Oosthuizen.

Finally, Koepka lost the 2023 Masters to Jon Rahm. The difference was four strokes and he finished tied with Phil Mickelson.

Koepka has also finished in the top 25 in six other Majors. He has only finished outside the top 30 in seven events (not counting the times he missed the cut or withdrew).

Curiously, Koepka’s Major wins are more than half of his PGA Tour victories (9).