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Rory McIlroy delivered a stirring rallying cry to the Great Britain and Ireland Walker Cup squad, and it wasn’t simply about spurring on those budding amateurs.

McIlroy, who recently voiced his thoughts on a venue owned by Donald Trump, emphasised what could be accomplished at the Ryder Cup, issuing an unmistakable gauntlet: “Please beat them because I know we’re going to beat them at Bethpage.”

This transcended mere encouragement. It was a declaration, one rooted in McIlroy’s own journey from Walker Cup disappointment to Ryder Cup glory. McIlroy’s rallying cry came through video for the GB&I team just before their showdown at Cypress Point. His words carried tremendous weight, not merely because of his achievements, but because he grasped the pain of falling short.

Rory McIlroy the leading man in Europe's Italian job

READ: How one round of golf with Tiger Woods inspired Scottie Scheffler to become

McIlroy now approaches Bethpage Black for the 2025 Ryder Cup as a seasoned leader confronting extraordinary expectations.

Europe’s most recent victory on American soil occurred in 2012 at Medinah, celebrated as one of golf’s most iconic comebacks.

Hosting the tournament at New York’s brutally demanding Bethpage, with its narrow fairways and infamously raucous crowds, poses a colossal test.

Yet McIlroy isn’t the sole figure radiating self-assurance. This year’s European lineup is more seasoned and experienced than the victorious team in Rome in 2023, according to him.

“I love the team that Luke has assembled. It’s a very strong 12 players and I think it’s the right 12 players,” he expressed on Sky Sports.

“You could certainly make that case [that the players are stronger than in Rome]. You could argue that pretty much every player is more accomplished than two years ago.”

The squad features ten veterans from the Rome triumph, with Rasmus Hojgaard being the only new face. They’re battle-hardened. They’re proven. They’re ready.

And with golfers like Robert MacIntyre, Ludvig Aberg, and Tommy Fleetwood showing exceptional form, Team Europe is brimming with confidence.

On the American side, expect everything they’ve got, and then some. The host nation, led by Keegan Bradley, boasts world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, explosive talents like Xander Schauffele and Bryson DeChambeau, plus a fervent crowd ready to cheer them on.

An interesting post-fight bonus is on the line for Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford next weekend, but the Mexican must buck a worrying trend to land it first.

Defending the undisputed super middleweight crown for the first time in his second reign, Canelo Alvarez will welcome the title charge of the unbeaten Terence Crawford on September 13.

And in the blockbuster title affair backed by Saudi adviser Turki Alalshikh, an interesting post-fight bonus is up for grabs for the main event victor.

Terence Crawford Canelo Alvarez

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However, if Canelo in particular is to avail of that premium, he will have to bring an end to an unwanted four-year streak.

Knockout bonus on the line for Canelo Alvarez and Terence Crawford

While both Canelo and incoming challenger Crawford would likely be more than happy with a win by any method in their title fight; however, they would be leaving some lucrative spoils on the table.

As confirmed by the royal adviser Alalhsikh, in a bid to bring around more activity, a post-fight financial bonus is up for grabs between the duo.

And following their respective disappointing performances en route to wins over William Scull and Israil Madrimov last time out, Canelo and Crawford have been offered an incentive.

“We will not have [a fighter who is running] anymore [on our shows], this is the first thing,” Alalshikh said in June. (H/T The Ring)

“The second [thing], we will have in [Alvarez vs. Crawford] and [future] fights, bonuses for KOs,” He continued.

Having being forced the twelve-round distance in each of his six most recent wins at the super middleweight limit, Canelo will have to go against the grain to take advantage of that post-fight bonus, however.

Canelo Alvarez’s most recent knockout win

Racking up six straight wins since his light heavyweight title fight loss to Dmitry Bivol, interestingly enough, Canelo’s most recent win by stoppage came in his first undisputed super middleweight title fight.

Pitted against then-IBF super middleweight champion Caleb Plant in a tense 2021 grudge match, Jalisco star Canelo would prevail to capture all the gold at 168lbs.

And following their bad-blooded pre-fight verbal and physical assaults on each other, Canelo would add the IBF crown to his mantle with a penultimate round knockout win at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas.

For Crawford to win a post-fight bonus, he would first need to overcome the odds as the smaller man against Canelo; however, his staggering 11-fight knockout spree was halted in his forgettable decision win over Madrimov last summer.

Terence Crawford is days away from his mega fight against Canelo Alvarez in Las Vegas.

With just over a week remaining, news of another big fight hit the boxing world like a freight truck. Coming off his unanimous decision loss to Jake Paul last year, Mike Tyson is returning to the ring one more time to square off against the undefeated Floyd Mayweather next year for an exhibition fight. And Crawford just made things interesting.

The two-weight undisputed champion appeared on the Full Send Podcast with host Kyle Forgeard. The pair discussed a plethora of subjects, including his upcoming bout, but the real fun began when Forgeard brought up Mayweather and Tyson. He pressed Terence Crawford about his thoughts on facing both fighters in their prime, asking for a prediction in both scenarios from the Nebraskan technician. And Crawford didn’t hold anything back with his answers.

Mike Tyson vs Floyd Mayweather rules emerge as boxing fight confirmed | The  Standard

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Terence Crawford has zero doubt about his take

“Me,” Crawford quickly responded when asked who would win in a fight between a prime Floyd Mayweather and himself. “Why would you think that I would say Floyd?” Stunned by Crawford’s confidence, Forgeard admitted he expected Crawford to hesitate. But ‘Bud’ doubled down, clarifying, “No, not at all.” Still, he made sure to acknowledge that Mayweather was one of the fighters he admired during his prime.

When asked about past greats he would have loved to face, the undefeated champion rattled off a list of legends. “It’s a lot, you know,” Crawford said. “If I [could] go back in history, it’d be Roberto Durán. It’d be Julio Cesar Chavez Sr., Sugar Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler, those types of fighters.” The host then posed a hypothetical: a prime-for-prime matchup with Mike Tyson, if Tyson had been Crawford’s size.

“If Mike Tyson [were] my size… I would beat him, easy…,” Crawford declared. He even broke down what made Tyson so dangerous in his era. “I think Mike Tyson beat those guys because he was faster and more explosive than those heavyweight guys. When you look at Mike Tyson back in the day, he was ferocious. You know, this is speed and power and explosiveness combined like they couldn’t keep up with it.”

Clearly, Crawford thinks he can beat both Tyson and Mayweather, but what is the secret to overcoming such skilled opponents?

Crawford reveals how to beat Floyd Mayweather

Floyd Mayweather may have looked undefeatable throughout his illustrious career, as he took over the sport of boxing and retired undefeated. However, Terence Crawford thinks there’s a way of beating Floyd Mayweather. During an appearance on the Ring Champs podcast, the 37-year-old revealed the secret to penetrating Mayweather’s defense.

Crawford joked, “You’ve got to have four arms and six eyes to beat Floyd.” He also admitted he would have taken the fight had their relationship been different at the time. “Floyd yeah [I would’ve fought him] because I wasn’t as close, me and Floyd are close now, but when Floyd was boxin,g I wasn’t as close with Floyd like I am now.”

Anthony Joshua vs Moses Ituma

Anthony Joshua is ready to fight Moses Ituma “at one moment” – but only under one condition.

Ituma is considered the next big heavyweight star, having knocked out Dillian Whyte in the first round of his last fight.

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However, finding opponents willing to risk their record, reputation, and health against this 20-year-old talent proved more difficult than expected. Joshua’s promoter, Eddie Hearn, confirmed that the two-Time champion is ready for a fight with Ituma, but only if a world title is on the line.

Hearn noted: “AJ, his decision will be completely different. He would probably be very pleased to fight Moses. He would find that exciting, and if there was a chance to fight Moses for the heavyweight world title, we would seize it immediately.”

Joshua is somewhat viewed as a mentor to Ituma, as they train in the same gym under the guidance of Ben Davison. However, Ituma’s promoter, Frank Warren, doubts that this pair will ever meet in the ring.

He admitted: “I would do it (the fight) tomorrow. But that’s not going to happen. Firstly, they have the same trainer.”

Hearn also emphasized that he does not believe a fight with Ituma is sensible for Joshua. “Moses is a very good boxer. If you win, you just beat a 20-year-old kid, and if you lose – your career is over,” he added.

Joshua and Ituma’s Plans

Joshua, 35, has not stepped into the ring since being knocked out by Daniel Dubois in September 2024 and undergoing elbow surgery in the summer. Recently, there were discussions about a possible fight with YouTuber and athlete Jake Paul, but Paul has already announced an exhibition match on November 14 against lightweight Gervonta Davis.

At the same time, Ituma is preparing for a fight in December, and Hearn wants him to be tested in practice.

Hearn expressed, “I think Moses has a lot of work to do. He’s extremely talented, but we don’t know if he’ll be able to meet the demands necessary to become a true great champion.”

  • “What if he gets hit? What will happen to him in tough situations?”
  • “Moses will become the world heavyweight champion… But I would develop that slowly.”

In the fast-evolving heavyweight landscape, a fight between Joshua and Ituma could be a pivotal moment for both boxers. For one, it’s a chance to revive a career, while for the other, it’s about proving readiness for the big stage. The significance of this bout is underscored not only by sporting interest but also by the growing demand for new stars in boxing. Time will tell if these plans come to fruition.

Anthony Joshua looks set to return to the ring in early 2026 over a year after his knockout defeat by Daniel Dubois, and recovering from a minor procedure on his elbow.

His promoter, Eddie Hearn, has revealed he will be “carefully” selecting a top 15 opponent for the former champion to build some momentum heading into a potential all-British super fight with Tyson Fury next summer.

Hearn told Sky Sports: “We’ve got to choose carefully for the next fight, and I think the best way in all of this is just to be honest and say the next fight will be a comeback fight to build into a roll of the dice next summer.

The bravest thing Anthony Joshua can do is retire from boxing | Anthony  Joshua | The Guardian

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“We need a top-15 guy. It’s not going to be Fury, Usyk, Dubois, all of those top guys.”

If we aren’t going to see Joshua against any of the top heavyweights before next summer, who is available for him to dust off the cobwebs and reassert himself in boxing’s blue-riband division?

Jarrell Miller

Jarrell Miller is something of a ghost from Joshua’s past. He was supposed to make his grand US debut and defend his newly unified heavyweight titles against Miller in June 2019.

Joshua revealed a different side to himself in the build-up to this fight. Miller had clearly got under Joshua’s skin, and in an interview, he revealed he wanted to hurt Miller.

Joshua said: “Look at his face. I’m going to reconstruct his face and body.

“Every ounce of his spirit. I’m going to strip him of it.”

Miller ended up failing a drug test before the fight, and this opened the door for late replacement Andy Ruiz to pull off one of the biggest upsets in boxing history – derailing Joshua’s US debut and career.

Miller does not yet have his next opponent scheduled, and it could be the perfect fight for Joshua on his return.

There is plenty of history between the two to sell the fight and get Joshua fired up. Miller is also ranked in the top 10 with the WBA and is more than capable of giving Joshua the rounds he would need to regain his momentum.

Efe Ajagba

Efe Ajagba is coming off a draw with Martin Bakole that left fans disappointed as neither man put on their best performance, but many thought the Nigerian had done enough to get the win.

This has not hampered his world title hopes, however, as the IBF have ordered him and Frank Sanchez to fight in a final eliminator for the title currently held by Oleksandr Usyk.

There is no date for the fight as yet, but if it takes place before the end of the year, then there is more than enough time for Ajagba to recover and get ready for a fight with Joshua in February.

It could also work out nicely for Joshua if Ajagba becomes the mandatory challenger for the IBF title, and he cannot make the fight with Fury. In this case, a fight with Ajagba may get him right back into the title mix.

Martin Bakole

The formerly self-proclaimed most avoided man in the division, Bakole, is in something of a rut after suffering a second-round knockout defeat to Joseph Parker, followed by a fortunate draw with Ajagba earlier this year.

But Bakole now claims to be a changed man and has promised to return to the ring at a proper fighting weight, rather than nearly 300lbs.

If this is the case it would also be an enticing fight for Joshua to take. Similar to Miller, Bakole’s robust shape and slightly unorthodox style would be an interesting puzzle for Joshua to unlock. But his overall athleticism, speed and power should be too much for Bakole in the end.

His recent form would also be something that could draw Joshua in, as Bakole is a top 15 fighter with three of the four sanctioning bodies, but is on a downturn and could be ripe for the taking.

Bakole hails from the Democratic Republic of Congo, while Joshua has Nigerian roots, opening up the possibility of the fight taking place in Africa, a scenario that has been on Joshua’s bucket list for some time.

Derek Chisora

Derek Chisora is enjoying a true Indian summer in his career after claiming two unlikely wins against Joe Joyce and Otto Wallin that have seen him shoot back into the conversation at the top of the division and become ranked second with the IBF.

After what was supposed to be part of Chisora’s farewell tour, he held up three photos of men he would like to challenge in his 50th and final fight (probably). The three men were Oleksandr Usyk, who credits Chisora as one of his hardest fights at heavyweight, Daniel Dubois and the man in question – Anthony Joshua.

The two have shared a long-standing friendship since Chisora saw Joshua walk through the doors of Finchley Amatuer Boxing club all those years ago and has affectionately referred to him as ‘little brother’.

For a time, a fight between them seemed to be more fantasy than reality – two men of different generations sharing a brief crossover. But now that Chisora has reignited a career of ups and downs, Joshua could have the honour of being the final man to share the ring with a legend of British Boxing.

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson, once believed to be the next American heavyweight hope, is in the midst of an important rebuild in his young career after suffering a knockout loss to Martin Bakole, which saw the Congolese man steal the limelight and leave him in the wilderness.

He has since come back and beaten Marios Kollias on points in February, but there has been no news on his next move.

It would be a surprise to see Anderson go from a low-level confidence-building fight like his last, straight into a fight with a former unified champion like Joshua, but if he can get out once more this year, a fight with Joshua could be a mutually beneficial proposition.

Although Joshua would be the heavy favourite heading into the fight, Anderson has shown flashes of brilliance throughout his career thus far and would have more than enough to cause some issues for the Brit.

It could also be an opportunity for Anderson to earn back the title of the next heavyweight hope in the US and jump a few places in the queue for a world title shot.

How one round of golf with Tiger Woods inspired Scottie Scheffler to become one of the most dominant athletes in the world

Every superhero has an origin story and Scottie Scheffler’s narrative arc can be traced back to November 15, 2020 – a series of events that barely anybody noticed at the time.

That was the day Scheffler and Tiger Woods played together in the Masters tournament: the first and only time that they’ve ever played together. Despite the fact Woods was defending champion, he was out of contention on the final day.

It was the year of Covid, the tournament was being played in winter instead of the traditional spring, and the galleries were as barren as the Augusta trees, social distancing protocols had kept the patrons at bay. And yet, this was arguably the moment when the torch of greatness was handed from one American golf star to the next.

The 'underrated' trait that Scottie Scheffler, Tiger Woods share in common

READ: Tiger Woods handed major new golf role amid doubts he’ll ever pla

Scheffler says that what transpired over those 18 holes changed his career. “I’ve only played one round of tournament golf with Tiger Woods,” he said this week at the Tour Championship in Atlanta, “and it completely changed the way I play tournaments.”

With Ireland’s Shane Lowry making up the threesome, the group was one of the first to tee off at 8:12 AM on that Sunday in 2020. At the time, Scheffler, who is now mentioned routinely in the same breath as the 15-time major winner, was still 15 months away from his first professional win.

“I can’t tell you,” he explained, “the look on his face when we got to the first green. We’re in 20th place, kind of playing yada, yada, yada, and this guy is just locked in. I was taken aback, I was like, ‘Holy smokes, this guy is in it right now!’”

Both men parred the opening hole, Scheffler then described Tiger’s approach to the second: “He had this chip shot, and he looked at it like it was an up-and-down to win the tournament. I’m like, ‘This is incredible! I’ve never seen anything like this before in my life.’”

Scheffler is now a four-time major winner and an Olympic gold medalist with a total of 18 PGA Tour wins to his name, although he’s winning with such frequency these days that the number might have changed by the time you are reading this. He’s been the world No. 1 player since May 2023 and he’s the first golfer since Tiger Woods in 2007 to win at least five tournaments in consecutive seasons.

But on this particular day, he hadn’t yet been able to convert any of his considerable promise into a trophy. “The question was always, ‘Hey, how come you haven’t won?’” he said.

“The reason I felt like I hadn’t won yet is I hadn’t put myself in position enough times and that’s one of the things I learned from playing with Tiger. My biggest takeaway was the amount of intensity that he took to every shot, it was like the last shot he was ever going to hit.”

Having both birdied the second hole at Augusta, Scheffler and Woods headed in different directions; Woods had dropped three strokes by the time they walked off the 11th green, Scheffler had made two bogeys but recovered with a birdie and what happened next is etched into his memory – Woods played the worst hole of his PGA Tour career.

With his tee shot on 12, Woods found the water at Rae’s Creek. He incurred a penalty stroke and ended up in the water again. Another penalty, and with now a fifth stroke, Woods made sure to avoid the Creek, sending his ball to the back of the green and into the bunker.

From there, he thinned an awkward pitch out of the sand, over the green and back into the water. By now he was playing like a weekend hacker, his next shot from the bunker was his eighth and a subsequent two-putt resulted in his first double digit score on a PGA Tour hole, a 10. On a par-three hole, he’d dropped an incredible seven strokes for a disastrous septuple bogey.

Woods’ chances of a sixth green jacket were already remote, but now they were completely and utterly dashed. But that’s not what Scheffler remembers.

Many golfers would have gone into a tailspin after such a nightmare, not Tiger Woods. He immediately punched back with a birdie on 13. In fact, he finished his round with five birdies in his last six holes. With a ringside seat to an extraordinary recovery, Scheffler was taking notes.

“It was like, ‘What’s this guy still playing for?’” he wondered. “He’s won the Masters four or five times, best finish he’s going to have is like 20th at this point. I just admired the intensity that he brought to each round and that’s something I try to emulate.”

Scheffler has always been a strong iron player, and in recent years, he’s dramatically improved his putting. But his secret sauce seems to be his ability to quickly recover from a setback; his biggest strength is mental.

Scheffler has made fewer bogeys than anyone else on tour this season; he only fumbled four holes at The Open Championship at Royal Portrush, but he makes a habit of mitigating the damage with a birdie or eagle on the very next hole.

At The Open, Scheffler’s recovery rate was 50%. At the PGA Championship, it was an extraordinary 60%. He won both majors.

Sports psychologist Dr Phil Hopley explained to CNN Sports how Scheffler makes something so difficult look so simple.

“He stays focused in the present moment,” he said. “He lets go of what’s happened and recognizes that the more time he spends thinking about things that haven’t gone well, the more potentially nervous, anxious, fearful or negative he’s going to feel.

“If you’re still simmering, even small things like a minor increase in the tension in your forearms because you’ve released too much cortisol and adrenaline, is going to have a potentially disastrous effect on your swing pattern and your execution.”

Scheffler witnessed first-hand how Tiger Woods was able to do it, and now it’s become the foundation for his own dominant game. Just two years later, he won the first of his two Masters titles, and he’s hardly stopped winning since. Even many of his rivals now admit that he’s almost untouchable.

“The things that I do on the golf course, other people can do,” Scheffler surmised. “I don’t hit the ball the furthest. I think it’s just the amount of consistency and the intensity that I bring to each round of golf, not taking shots off, not taking rounds off, not taking tournaments off. I’m here for a purpose and that’s to complete hard on every shot.”

Scheffler’s prolific success has led to inevitable comparisons with Woods himself, which he dismisses as “very silly.”

“I don’t like comparisons to other players because I’m doing the best I can to be the best version of myself. He completely transcended the game. I think Tiger is a guy that stands alone in the game of golf, and I think he always will. Tiger inspired a whole generation of golfers. Watching what that guy did week in, week out, it was pretty amazing to see.”

So, he doesn’t want to be known as the next Tiger Woods, but he’s pretty amazing himself, and as fans of the Marvel comics will tell you, there’s always room for more than one superhero in the universe.

Deontay Wilder has appeared to welcome a mouthwatering showdown with former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou.

Ngannou revealed on The Ariel Helwani Show last month that he wants to return to boxing and named ex-heavyweight king Wilder as his primary target.

Wilder’s manager, Shelly Finkel, subsequently dismissed the chances of the fight happening in 2025 and suggested his man would be chasing bouts with Anthony Joshua or Oleksandr Usyk next year, but Wilder has now delivered his own message on social media.

GettyImages-2063580738.jpg

READ: Floyd Mayweather’s precision shocked me – I thought it was an exh 

Alongside a video of himself connecting with a huge right hand on the pads, Wilder wrote on Instagram: “Respect, but I’m ten toes down no fear, no fold, no fake… always ready, always solid.

“Step in the ring and you’ll see what that means @francisngannou.”

Wilder made his comeback in June following a 12-month absence to stop fellow American Tyrrell Herndon inside seven rounds. Wilder had lost four of his previous five fights after holding the WBC heavyweight title between 2015 and 2020.

Meanwhile, Ngannou has only stepped into the boxing ring on two occasions after leaving the UFC. He was controversially outpointed by Tyson Fury in October 2023 before being brutally knocked out by Joshua five months later.

Ngannou returned to MMA to beat Brazil’s Renan Ferreira via first-round knockout last October but feels he has unfinished business with boxing.

Speaking about a potential fight with Wilder recently, Ngannou told journalist Helwani: “We haven’t engaged personally, but it’s going to be soon. We are setting some things up.”

Wilder now seems to have given the green light for the fight to happen as he looks to build momentum in his career after a difficult run.

And it may happen sooner rather than later, with Wilder set to turn 40 next month. Time is not on his side, meaning the crossover contest could be arranged swiftly, as Wilder bids to make one final push to get back into the title mix before hanging up his gloves.

Rematch: Despite Crushing First Loss, Errol Spence Enforces Terence Crawford Rematch Clause

Spence wants a December rematch with Crawford to be contested up at light-middleweight after struggles to make 147 pounds

Errol Spence has confirmed that he intends to swiftly exercise his clause for a rematch against Terence Crawford, despite being absolutely blown away by his rival.

Crawford produced an all-time great performance to make history as boxing’s first male two-weight undisputed world champion of the four-belt era in Las Vegas on Saturday night, battering a bloodied and stunned Spence and delivering three ruthless knockdowns en route to a brutal ninth-round stoppage

‘Bud’ also laid a huge claim to the title of the world’s best pound-for-pound fighter, staying undefeated at 40-0 with 31 knockouts and inflicting Spence’s first professional loss in the process as he added the WBA, WBC and IBF titles at 147 pounds to the WBO strap he has held since 2018.

READ MORE : “I’ll give him a 10: Terence Crawford Hails Errol Spence as a

Three-division world champion Crawford is 8-0 since moving up to welterweight after a stint as undisputed at light-welterweight, knocking out everyone put in his path including now no fewer than six current or former world champions.

Terence Crawford

Despite the totally one-sided nature of what many had billed as the biggest occasion in the sport since Floyd Mayweather vs Manny Pacquiao in 2015, Spence remains motivated to swiftly avenge his maiden defeat with a December bout that he hopes is contested up at the light-middleweight limit of 154 pounds, having said many times in the build-up to the fight that it would be his last at welter due to his struggle to make the weight.

“We’ve got to do it again. I would be a lot better, it would be a lot closer. We got to do it again,” Spence said immediately after the fight of another meeting with Crawford this year.

He later said in his post-bout press conference: “I’m definitely open to the rematch and hopefully it will be at 154 pounds.”

RELATED NEWS : Heated Rivalry Rekindled: Gervonta Davis and Lamont Roach in

Asked if the public would “buy” a rematch between the duo after the completely one-sided nature of their first fight on Saturday, Crawford said: “Of course the public would buy it, look how many people came out to show us both support tonight.

Gervonta Davis

“If the fight happens again I am pretty sure the support will come out again for both of us.”

Crawford also surprisingly appeared open to the prospect of moving up to 154 pounds to facilitate the rematch with Spence.

“147 pounds was kinda hard for me too,” he said. “I was already talking about moving up and challenging [undisputed light-middleweight world champion] Jermell Charlo, so 154 pounds wouldn’t be out of reach.”

Tiger’s Son Charlie Takes Down America’s Best Juniors for Maiden AJGA Title After Humiliates Ranked Rivals in Breakthrough AJGA Win

Charlie Woods has taken a big first step out of his father’s immense shadow in the golfing world. The 16-year-old son of golf legend Tiger Woods made a huge statement this week by winning the American Junior Golf Association’s Team TaylorMade Invitational at Streamsong Resort in Bowling Green, Fla. He shot a 15-under-par 201 (70-65-66) to finish three shots ahead of a trio of players tied for second place.

“Being able to say to myself that I’ve won in an absolutely amazing event and to say I preformed under some high, high pressure situations is just huge going forward,” Charlie Woods said afterward, “because I haven’t been able to say that I have done that. And now that I can, it is just a big thing for my mental game going forward

Currently ranked as the No. 609 boys junior player in the U.S., Woods is expected to move into the top 20 next week, after topping a 71-player field that featured four golfers who currently rank in the AJGA’s top five. That includes top-ranked Miles Russell of Jacksonville Beach, Fla., who finished six shots behind Woods and in seventh place with a nine-under 207.

READ MORE : “The King Roars Again: Tiger Woods Seizes Leadership Role in

Tiger Woods

Playing in his first AJGA invitational, Woods finished the event with 26 birdies — the most ever at an AJGA Invitational, based on information available to the organization — to go with one eagle. He was tied for 14th place after Monday’s opening round but had pulled into a tie for second going into Wednesday’s final round.

“I didn’t look at the leaderboard once today,” said Woods, who gained fully exempt AJGA status with his victory.

A sophomore at Benjamin School in Palm Beach, Fla., Woods finished tied for 25th at the prestigious Junior Invitational at Sage Valley (a tournament that counts toward the AJGA rankings but is not an AJGA-sanctioned event) in March.

He and his father have competed in the parent-child PNC Championship every December since 2020. They finished as runners-up in 2021 and 2024, with Charlie Woods notching his first hole-in-one at the most recent event.

Since 1951 Topps Boxing Makes Iconic Comeback, But Gervonta Davis Is Brutally Left Out

As of August 2025, Gervonta Davis remains undefeated with a professional record of 30 wins, 0 losses, and 1 draw. He currently holds the World Boxing Association (WBA) lightweight title, a belt he has defended successfully since 2023.

Most recently, Davis was held to a controversial draw by Lamont Roach Jr., in a bout that many observers felt Davis had narrowly edged.

Since then, Davis has faces legal challenges over an alleged incident in June related to a domestic violence dispute with his former partner and mother of his children.

On August 7, Topps announced on social media that Gervonta Davis “will not be included” in the forthcoming range of collectible cards featuring boxing personalities. And in doing so, they may have inadvertently created the most sought after boxing collectible.

READ MORE : Anthony Joshua Vows To Stays Relentless, Pursuing The Fight

Topps has yet to give an official reason for removing the Baltimore fighter from the collection, though social media users suggested it was linked to his legal troubles.

Anthony Joshua

In recent months, Davis has been linked to fights with Jake Paul and potential retirement from the sport. Though retirement talk has been called out by his trainer as fake news.

Images of an autographed Tank Davis card have circulated online and was listed as a unique Topps Chrome card. However, that no longer appears to be the case.

“Topps Chrome Boxing features legends, rookies & stars, and is the first boxing release in history to be officially licensed by multiple boxing promotions,” said Topps in a statement announcing the release. It is the first Topps boxing card release since 1951.

RELATED  NEWS : Rivalry Tention: Gervonta ‘Tank’ Davis Given Bold Challenge,

This is the first Topps boxing card release since 1951, which was a legendary and groundbreaking release in the field of sports collectibles. Topps decided to focus on baseball and other sports and never returned to making another boxing set since.

Gervonta Davis

It includes heavyweight champions like Rocky Marciano and Joe Louis. Other Hall of Fame fighters in the set include iconic names like Sugar Ray Robinson and Jake LaMotta, Jersey Joe Walcott, and Ezzard Charles.

In all, over twenty incredible fighters who later ended up in the prestigious International Boxing Hall of Fame are featured in the 1951 set.