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Charlie Woods undergoes drastic body transformation as son of golf legend Tiger, 16, drops huge amount of weight

CHARLIE Woods’ high school coach has lifted the lid on the 16-year-old’s progress.

The teenager is the son of golf legend Tiger Woods and is believed to be a promising player himself.

Charlie earned his first AJPA invitational victory back in May as a huge outsider.

Charlie Woods' coach reveals teenager's dramatic body change in bid to  follow in Tiger's footsteps | Daily Mail Online

READ: VIDEO: Tiger Woods’ first public range session in months sparks questions

While his illustrious father has caddied for him at various junior events.

Charlie attends The Benjamin School, an elite prep school in Palm Beach, Florida.

Unsurprisingly he has excelled in high school golf and is among his class’ key players.

Woods’ Benjamin coach Toby Harbeck has opened up about the prodigy’s progress.

Harbeck told The Palm Beach Post, “I’ve got those three juniors who have played on the team and have quite a lot of experience.

“My first three guys are going to be really good.”

Harbeck then gushed over how Woods was handling the heightened expectations placed upon him.

“Charlie knows a lot of the attention is going to be on him and he knows not to put himself in an uncomfortable position,” Harbeck continued.

“But his teammates are protective of him.”

On how exactly Woods has managed to improve, Harbeck was clear.

“Charlie has come a long way in two years,” he insisted.

“He’s lost 10 pounds and is ready to take on that No1 role.

“When Tiger and Elin show up to watch, Tiger is a different person than what you see on TV.

“Just like Jack [Nicklaus] was.”

Charlie can expect to spend plenty of time on the road next year.

Harbeck vowed, “You can’t get any better by beating the same teams every day.”

Charlie is the son of Woods and ex-wife Elin Nordegren.

His older sister Sam, 18, has also pursued athletics.

Rather than golf, however, she focuses on soccer and track and field.

Tiger Woods is back… hitting balls on a driving range in public view for the first time in months.

It made not sound like news, but it’s hugely consequential when it comes to the 15-time major champion, his legions of fans and his future in pro golf.

Here’s what you need to know.

Tiger Woods' first public range session in months sparks questions

Tiger Woods spotted on range at Liberty National

First, the goods. This week, Woods is at Liberty National in New Jersey. The course, with views of Manhattan’s skyline just across the river, has hosted multiple PGA Tour events, as well as the 2017 Presidents Cup.

In recent years, it has also hosted the Nexus Cup. The Nexus Cup is an annual luxury amateur golf event. According to the official website, the event is “available to only 18 foursomes, combines two days of team competition with curated gifts, exquisite cuisine, fine wine and more including exciting evening festivities at NEXUS Club New York.”

 

READ: Tiger Woods risks wrath of Donald Trump and girlfriend Vanessa!

In his role as host, Woods has frequently performed clinics for the lucky attendees at the Nexus Cup in years past. And this year appears to be no different.

On Tuesday, video surfaced of Woods hitting balls on Liberty National’s range. The quick clip shows Woods decked out in blue Sun Day Red golf clothes, hitting what appears to be a full wedge shot.

It also appears that Tiger is swinging without pain, which is significant given his latest surgery in March that has kept him off the golf course ever since — at least when cameras have been rolling.

Check out the clip below.

Why does Tiger’s range session matter?

So why are golf fans desperate to see a glimpse of Woods on the range? That’s simple. They haven’t seen it in a long, long time.

The last time Woods competed against pros in public was his final TGL match of the season in early March. He was expected to make his return to pro golf shortly thereafter, perhaps at the 2025 Masters.

But days after his final TGL match, Woods announced that he’d ruptured his Achilles tendon. The resulting surgery and recovery ended his PGA Tour comeback hopes for 2025.

Tiger Woods risks wrath of Donald Trump (and girlfriend Vanessa!) as he rubs shoulders with top Democrat Josh Shapiro

Tiger Woods was pictured alongside high-ranking Democrat Josh Shapiro as he cut the ribbon of his new ‘learning lab’ at a golf center in Philadelphia on Monday.

The golf legend is currently dating Vanessa Trump, the former daughter-in-law of President Trump. Vanessa has five children with her Donald Jr., who she married in 2005 before the couple divorced in 2018.

Tiger Woods launches youth education center at renovated Cobbs Creek Golf  Course | Local News | phillytrib.com

JUST IN: Tiger Woods pictured with Democrat Josh Shapiro in what could be

She and Woods went public with their relationship in March. The golf legend has also been invited to the White House a number of times by Trump, who gave him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2019.

But at a ceremony on Monday, the 15-time major champion rubbed shoulders with Philadelphia’s democratic mayor Cherelle Parker and Pennsylvania governor Shapiro.

‘I was raised: family, education and then whatever sport I played,’ Woods said at the event, per the Washington Post.

‘The opportunities that we’ve been able to create for underserved youth has been something that has been fun to be a part of, and we’re just only getting started.’

The learning lab has been created by Woods’ nonprofit TGR Foundation. It will offer local students – from first through 12th grade – access to educational tools covering subjects such as science, technology and engineering.

Among the aims of the learning lab is to help ready young people for college and their careers.

The 30,000 square-foot facility features nine classrooms as well as a music recording room, podcast studio and a golf simulator.

‘It combines my passion for supporting youth through education and golf,’ Woods said earlier this year.

‘We will provide opportunities for thousands of kids to learn, grow and chase after their dreams for many years to come.’

Woods’ future as a player is in doubt after he tore his Achilles but last month it was revealed that the 49-year-old will chair a ‘Future Competition Committee’ tasked with reimagining how the PGA Tour runs its tournaments.

The nine-member panel is being framed as a fresh start for a sport still fractured by the rise of the Saudi-backed LIV Golf League.

‘This is about shaping the next era of the PGA Tour,’ Woods said in a statement posted onto social media.

The 49-year-old is currently ranked No 1,839 in the world, having played just 11 events since his February 2021 car crash.

Tiger Woods pictured with Democrat Josh Shapiro in what could be perceived as a snub to President Trump

Tiger Woods, one of golf’s most recognizable figures, inaugurated a new educational facility in West Philadelphia this week.

Standing alongside Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro and Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker, the 15-time major champion unveiled the Smilow Woodland TGR Learning Lab, a center designed to deliver academic and career development opportunities for local students.

Tiger Woods launches youth education center at renovated Cobbs Creek Golf Course | Local News | phillytrib.com

JUST IN: Watch Tiger Woods delivers emotive speech as he cuts

The initiative is part of Woods’s long-running TGR Foundation, which was established nearly three decades ago to provide underserved communities with access to education.

The Philadelphia site is the second TGR Learning Labin the United States, following the original facility in Anaheim, California.

Spanning 30,000 square feet, the building includes nine classrooms, a multipurpose hall, a maker space, a music recording studio, and a podcast booth.

A golf simulator links the sports theme with the Lab’s broader educational goals. Programming is free of charge and targets students from first through twelfth grade, offering courses in science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics.

Woods emphasized the broader vision at the opening ceremony, pointing to his belief in prioritizing “family, education, and sport.”

He noted that the Lab is intended to help children not only pursue higher education but also prepare for professional pathways. The Philadelphia site is expected to serve more than 4,500 students each year.

Bridging education and opportunity in Philadelphia

The Learning Lab is the first major component completed within the $150-175 million restoration of the Cobbs Creek Golf and Education Campus.

Once finished, the wider project will also include a short course, driving range, clubhouse, entertainment facilities, and a heritage center honoring pioneering Black golfer Charlie Sifford.

Inside the Lab, programming is already underway. Courses range from rocketry and microbiology to photography and digital media production.

These offerings are intended to equip young people with practical skills and to spark long-term interest in disciplines often underrepresented in underserved communities.

Additional services include tutoring, health and wellness resources, and college readiness programs.

 

The Philadelphia Learning Lab mirrors the structure of the Anaheim site, which since 2006 has supported more than 200,000 students and produced measurable improvements in academic outcomes and college enrollment.

By replicating that model, the TGR Foundation hopes to achieve similar results in Pennsylvania.

Woods’s involvement goes beyond ceremonial duties. He has described the project as a direct extension of his personal commitment to youth development, stating earlier this year that the Lab “combines my passion for supporting youth through education and golf.”

His foundation, now a central part of his post-playing career, is positioned as a vehicle for long-term community investment.

Although Woods’s competitive golf schedule remains limited following injury setbacks, his role in shaping the future of both education and the sport continues to expand.

As chair of the PGA Tour’s newly formed “Future Competition Committee,” he is also tasked with influencing the direction of professional golf.

The Philadelphia Learning Lab underscores a different legacy-one rooted in opportunity and access. By linking education with sport in a dedicated space for thousands of children, Woodshas established a platform that may impact the city for decades to come.

Tiger Woods delivers emotive speech as he cuts ribbon to open new TGR Lab

Tiger Woods touched down in Philadelphia on Monday to open his brand-new TGR Learning Lab at the Cobbs Creek Golf & Education campus.

Woods, 49, drew a huge crowd as he cut the ribbon on the state-of-the-art facility, which will now deliver after-school and summer programmes built around science, technology, engineering, arts and maths (STEAM).

For the 15-time major champion, his latest project is all about shaping futures rather than simply lowering golf handicaps.

READ: Pressure Mounts on Tiger Woods as PGA Tour’s Flailing Fall Stretc

“It’s an honor to be here to celebrate this moment with my Foundation and the kids we’re serving in West Philadelphia,” said Woods.

“I’m proud of my team and grateful to Cobbs Creek Foundation and everyone who has worked with us to make an impact in this community.”

Woods added: “I didn’t start this foundation to produce golfers. I started the foundation to produce the greatest humans possible.”

The new facility marks the second TGR Learning Lab in the United States, following the first in Anaheim, California.

Its home at Cobbs Creek carries a personal touch for Woods as the course was once the stomping ground of his mentor, Charlie Sifford, the man who broke golf’s colour barrier on the PGA Tour.

The facility is already in demand. Open quietly since April, it has a waiting list of students eager to get in. Chris Maguire, chair of the Cobbs Creek Foundation, hailed the project as a model for the future.

“Tiger created this model of opportunity beyond golf, providing students with access to education and mentorship resources that empower them for success in school, in the community, and in life,” said Maguire.

Philadelphia’s Mayor Cherelle Parker called it a game-changer for the city, while student mentor Saafiya Greshm summed up the excitement in the classroom: “We see students building their dreams in innovative design. It’s incredible.”

Cobbs Creek Golf Course itself is undergoing a major transformation into a world-class public venue, with revenues earmarked to help sustain the Learning Lab. It’s a powerful symbol of how golf can fuel opportunity well beyond the fairways.

With the ribbon cut and the message delivered, Woods wasted no time moving on.

By the afternoon, he was in New York City for the Nexus Cup, a high-profile event that unites golfers, celebrities and philanthropists in support of the TGR Foundation.

Woods’ Nexus Cup is held annually at Liberty National Golf Club and the tournament combines two days of team-based golf competition with luxury experiences, including evening festivities at the NEXUS Club New York.

It remains unknown at this stage whether Woods will rock up at Bethpage Black in New York from 26-28 September to support Keegan Bradley’s Team USA at the Ryder Cup.

Woods has been heavily involved in Bradley’s preparations according to GOLF, who last week reported the former World No.1 continues to play a key role in the skipper’s planning for the Ryder Cup.

“Tiger is being consulted,” the source is quoted as saying. “And I know he feels like he’s a part of Keegan’s decisions and how he’s thinking about it, and Keegan has been hugely respectful of that.

“Without giving [Woods] an outsized role, I think it’s been balanced and kind of appropriate. He’s been sort of an informal advisor or Dutch uncle.”

Woods has remained on the sidelines ever since missing the cut at last year’s Open Championship at Royal Troon.

He underwent surgery to repair a left Achilles tendon earlier this season and he is expected to return to the PGA Tour in 2026.

Woods released a brand new Sun Day Red line of apparel last week, and it’s the coziest collection yet.

Huge Congratulations! Tiger Woods Can’t Hold Back Pride as Daughter Sam Woods Graduates High School

The daughter of golf legend Tiger Woods officially graduated from high school Sam Alexis Woods, born June 18, 2007, is the daughter of Tiger Woods, the GOAT in golf, and former model Elin Nordegren. Sam Woods graduated Friday, September 4, 2025, from the Benjamin School in Palm Beach Gardens in Palm Beach County, Florida.

Other famous students there include her younger brother, rising junior Charlie Woods (class of 2027), and Kai Madison Trump (class of 2026), the oldest granddaughter of President Donald Trump and daughter of Vanessa Trump, whom Tiger Woods is currently dating.

In March 2025, Tiger Woods made headlines for being in the stands cheering for daughter Sam at her state championship soccer match. Photos and video clips of a certified “greatest of all time” athlete rooting for his kid made the rounds on TikTok, Instagram and other social media platforms.

READ MORE : Ryder Cup:Tiger Woods’ Surprising Act Beyond Rivalry Sparked

The GOAT went viral for being a supportive dad.

In news interviews, Sam Woods has mentioned avoiding a professional career in golf because as a child, the tournaments meant long absences away from her father.

Tiger Woods

But as the daughter of a GOAT, Sam Woods made her own mark as an athlete: In addition to track and field, Sam Woods was a member of the Benjamin School Buccaneers soccer team.

Her younger brother, Charlie Woods, however, is starting to make a name for himself in golf.

As Sam Woods prepares for college classes in fall 2025, we take a look back at her life in photos and athletic career as a Benjamin Buccaneer before she heads to Stanford University.

RELATED NEWS : “Surprised!” Tiger Woods Confirms Teen Daughter Sam’s Hidden

Tiger Woods Sam Alexis Woods

Her next major milestone − for Sam Woods and for her famous parents? Turning 18 next month.

Sam Woods is part of the graduating class of 2025 at the Benjamin School in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. The private school spent the better part of May celebrating its seniors, with events such as a “senior send-off,” “senior awards” and, of course, the commencement ceremony.

High school graduation for Sam Woods, daughter of golf legend Tiger Woods, and the class of 2025 was Friday, September 4, 2025.

Pressure Mounts on Tiger Woods as PGA Tour’s Flailing Fall Stretch Tests His Leadership

For the first time in recent memory, the PGA Tour’s fall season is receiving more attention than it usually does. Next week’s Procore Championship, the first of seven FedExCup Fall events, features 10 of the 12 U.S. Ryder Cup players. But don’t be fooled by the temporary noise, as the fall stretch is still in a precarious position, and now, all the pressure is on

Tiger Woods and his new committee to fix it.

The Procore Championship begins September 11 at Silverado Resort, featuring several top players in sharp contrast to last year’s quiet fall season, when stars like Scottie Scheffler stayed home and the leaderboard lacked excitement. This year’s boost comes from Ryder Cup prep, but without lasting changes, the fall season will soon return to its usual low energy, low stakes, and limited fan interest.

Tiger Woods

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

At this point, Tiger Woods’ new committee, the Future Competition Committee, may be the Tour’s only real hope of turning this stretch into something more meaningful and engaging for both players and fans alike. As Eamon Lynch sharply put it — “Perhaps a long-term solution for this portion of the schedule will emerge from the Tiger Woods-chaired Future Competition Committee that is reviewing the Tour’s business. Let’s hope so, because this ain’t it.” Outside of Ryder Cup prep, most top-50 FedExCup players skip the fall since their spots for next season are secure.

This leaves fans watching lower-ranked players fight to keep their cards, adding to the pressure on Tiger Woods and his committee to revitalize the fall schedule. That vision is now in the hands of the newly formed Future Competition Committee, which is chaired by Tiger Woods and was created by CEO Brian Rolapp on August 20, 2025, roughly 18 days into his tenure.

The nine-member group includes influential Tour players like Patrick Cantlay and Adam Scott, partnered with the Strategic Sports Group to redefine “the optimal competitive model that enhances the PGA Tour’s value to fans, players, and partners.” Rolapp’s vision with this committee isn’t just to make small tweaks, but rather significant changes to the tour.

“The goal is not incremental change. The goal is significant change,” he said during the press conference at East Lake, where he announced the big step. The committee, as Rolapp highlighted, will operate on three principles: Parity, Scarcity, and Simplicity. While the tour has achieved competitive parity thanks to the depth of talent, the other two pillars have been sorely lacking. Scarcity was highlighted with the vision of ensuring top players compete together often to keep fans engaged, and simplicity, in better tying together the regular season and postseason. Clearly, neither of these two principles holds for the fall season.

While the committee works behind the scenes to reshape the Tour’s future, this week’s Procore Championship offers a rare glimpse into what a fall event could look like.

Who is teeing it up at the Procore Championship this week?

Ten members of the U.S. Ryder Cup team are set to tee it up at next week’s Procore Championship at Silverado Resort, including big names like Scottie SchefflerJustin Thomas, and Sam Burns, to name a few. This unusually stacked field for a fall event comes at the urging of Captain Keegan Bradley, who’s determined to avoid the sluggish start that plagued Team USA during the 2023 Ryder Cup loss in Rome. Bradley emphasized the need for sharper preparation, calling this tournament a crucial final tune-up before the team heads overseas.

However, not everyone is on board. Xander Schauffele, a Ryder Cup automatic qualifier who had a standout 2024 season with two major wins, is notably absent from the field. Schauffele struggled throughout this season and failed to qualify for the Tour Championship, finishing 42nd in the FedEx Cup standings. Asked in August if he planned to play in Napa, he was evasive — “I wouldn’t say there’s an expectation for us to play, but a lot of us do want to play just to stay fresh… I’ll have an even longer break, so we’ll see how that goes.” He, along with Bryson DeChambeauis the only two members of the team skipping the event this week. Bryson DeChambeau is absent because he is banned from the PGA Tour due to his ties to LIV Golf.

Tiger Woods’ Surprising Act Beyond Rivalry Sparked Shane Lowry’s Transformation Into a Ryder Cup Star

“A few days before Heather passed away she said to me, ‘If Woosie calls you, you have to play’.”

This is a tale of loss and destiny: the story of how Darren Clarke and Team Europe said goodbye to the golfer’s wife, Heather, at the 2006 Ryder Cup.

Golf is back at The K Club this weekend as Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry compete in the Irish Open.

And with it being a Ryder Cup year – many can’t help but cast their minds back to when the famous event was here.

A game of etiquette briefly lets it hair down once every two years to let rivalry run riot – but back in 2006, everyone was with Clarke. On both sides.

The scenes in Dublin that year reduced a usually-reserved Lee Westwood to tears and melted one of sport’s coldest-ever competitors in Tiger Woods.

Six weeks before it began, Heather Clarke passed away, aged 39, after battling breast cancer for several years.

Throughout her illness, she encouraged her husband to play, and insisted he accepted an unlikely wildcard from captain Ian Woosnam should it be offered to him.

READ MORE : Tiger’s Son Charlie Takes Down America’s Best Juniors for

“Heather would’ve wanted me to play,” Clarke said. “And the support I had through Heather’s illness, not just from the European players, but from the American players as well, the support they had given me was fantastic.”

Charlie Woods

The Northern Irishman hadn’t played since Heather’s death, but took the call nonetheless.

Paired up alongside Westwood, Clarke somehow went on to inspire Europe from the depths of grief.

It even inspired a young Shane Lowry – who has since revealed he was in the crowd and first dreamed of competing at the Ryder Cup as a 19-year-old at The K Club.

A memorable event began with one of the greatest moments in golf history, when Clarke was roared onto the first tee on Friday.

He told Golf Channel: “The emotion from everyone on that first tee was just incredible.

“I get onto the tee with the ball in my I hand, I look at Lee, and he’s crying. And Billy, his caddie, is crying.

“I put the ball down and I didn’t know if I was going to top it, hit it 40 yards, left, right, or whatever. I had no idea.

“I’m standing there over the ball and I thought, ‘Just make contact’.

RELATED NEWS : “Surprised!” Tiger Woods Confirms Teen Daughter Sam’s Hidden

“The ball came off and went 320 yards off the stick into the middle of the fairway.

“To this day, I have no idea how I managed to do that. You talk about how cool I was in the last round of The Open [in 2011].

“That wasn’t even a patch on that first tee shot at the K Club.”

Tiger woods

The likes of Phil Mickelson and Woods were among his victims over the week as Clarke won all three of his matches, and even Team USA could not deny him the moment.

Even Woods, typically stone-hearted at tournaments, stopped his practice before the event began and gave his rival a warm embrace on the driving range.

Upon making birdie on that opening hole, Mickelson and fellow opponent Chris DiMarco were the first to congratulate Clarke.

Woods didn’t pick many friends on Tour in his pomp, but he liked Clarke – the cigar-smoking, unchiseled man who took the exact opposite approach to golf.

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.

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.