- Golf. US Open Golf Championship 2025: When and where to watch, tee times, and every detail you need to know
- Golf. Paige Spiranac weighs in on Oakmont's punishing US Open setup amid pro golfer complaints
Charlie Woods is making more noise on the junior golf scene-and not just for what he's doing with a club in his hand. The 16-year-old son of Tiger Woods showed real flashes of brilliance at the 108th Florida Amateur Championship earlier this month, making the cut with rounds of 74 and 72 before slipping to a T66 finish. That weekend marked another important step in Charlie's young career.
But off the course, a story involving Charlie and popular golf content creator Bob Berger-aka Bobby Fairways from Bob Does Sports-has taken social media by storm.
During a recent episode of The Brilliantly Dumb Show, Berger dropped a stunner: Charlie Woods called him directly, asking if he could caddy for him in an Monday qualifier. "I'm at weigh-ins with my dad, and I get this call," Berger said. "Charlie goes, 'Hey Bob, are you free Monday morning?' I tell him I'm flying back from New York. And then he goes, 'Would you caddy for me?'"
A Missed Shot at Golf History?
The disbelief from Berger's co-hosts said it all. This wasn't just a random round-it was a personal call from Tiger Woods' son. A legit chance to carry the bag, walk inside the ropes, and maybe, just maybe, shake hands with the GOAT himself.
"I didn't even ask where it was. I just knew I couldn't make it,"Berger said, visibly regretting the missed opportunity. "Imagine Tiger seeing me out there, me on the bag-like, what?!"
While the qualifier Charlie referred to wasn't confirmed, he did recently compete in both the U.S. Open local qualifier and the Florida Amateur Championship. His progress has been steady, and his AJGA win in May at the Team TaylorMade Invitational only reinforced that he's not just playing the name game-he's earning it.
Charlie fired a clutch 66 in the final round in Bowling Green, Florida, to take home his first AJGA title. Eight birdies, two bogeys, and a composure reminiscent of his dad's Sunday charge had fans and analysts buzzing. "He's starting to write his own story,"Golf Channel's Brandel Chamblee said recently. "It's not just Tiger's kid out there anymore."
For Berger, though, that phone call might haunt him longer than any bad round. "I mean, who gets that call? I had a chance to be part of golf history," he said. "And I missed it because of a flight."
In golf, timing is everything-and not just on the greens.