Charlie Woods, son of 15-time major champion Tiger Woods, will join 31 other young golfers in the 54-hole tournament at TPC Myrtle Beach.
Tiger Woods’ son, Charlie Woods, is teeing off in a junior golf tournament in the Myrtle Beach area. Here’s what to know about the tournament.
Outside of diehard golf enthusiasts, most people probably wouldn’t recognize the players set to compete in the 2025 Dustin Johnson World Junior Golf Championship at TPC Myrtle Beach. However, there is one notable exception: Charlie Woods,
Dustin Johnson World Junior Golf Championship will be held from Feb. 28 to March 2 at TPC Myrtle Beach with young rising stars participating in
Dustin Johnson rings the changes as he decides not to renew Pat Perez's contract on 4Aces GC ahead of the 2025 LIV Golf League season.
Shots fired! Tiger Woods' long-time golf coach Butch Harmon believes PGA Tour events are proving a turn off because "the novice fan has no idea who any of them are."
Charlie Woods, the 15-year-old son of 15-time major champion Tiger Woods, is registered to participate in the 10th annual 54-hole tournament from Feb. 28-March 2 at TPC Myrtle Beach in Murrells Inlet. The tournament, being presented by LA Golf, will feature 60 of the top boys and 30 of the top girls ages 13-18 from around the globe.
The amount of astronomical money that modern day PGA Tour and LIV Golf players make has dramatically changed the all-time list.
While that has mostly been negative, the golf world has seen one major positive over the last month, and that's been the debut of the TGL, or "Tomorrow's Golf League," a venture spearheaded by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy.
On Thursday, LIV Golf and Fox Sports announced that the two parties agreed on a multi-year broadcasting deal that would bring life coverage of LIV's 14-tournament global schedule to cable TV starting this February ahead of the league's third official season.
Greg Norman declared LIV Golf had “changed the game forever” after officially being replaced as the chief executive and commissioner, but the Australian legend will “remain involved” with the Saudi-backed circuit.
Greg Norman left his role as LIV Golf's CEO and commissioner on Monday - but the two-time Open champion will continue to be associated with the Saudi-backed league