Tiger Woods says he is already giving his 13-year-old son Charlie “non-stop” mind games on the golf course in order to make him as tough a competitor as the 15-time Major champion.
Tiger’s huge advantage over the rest of the field during his glory years was his mentality – that single-minded desire to be the best went from physical training to range practice to on-course mental toughness.
Just striding onto the first tee on a Sunday, Tiger had most men already beaten before a headcover had come off or a ball was hit, and it’s that type of toughness he’s trying to impart onto young Charlie.
Tiger’s own late father Earl did the same thing, famously saying he “would do all kinds of things to mess him up” when the two played on the golf course – with the objective being to make him impervious to any future mind games he’d face out on the PGA Tour.
As his career has been winding down, Tiger has become a much more personable and emotional man both on and off the course, but he says he’s teaching Charlie the hard lessons already.
Charlie Woods keeps getting purer. I mean this is a PGA Tour quality swing. pic.twitter.com/BBhRbW2vJ8October 3, 2022
NBC’s Paul Azinger spoke to Woods Snr about the subject when Tiger joined them in the broadcast booth during the Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas, where Woods is hosting but not playing.
“It’s non-stop, non-stop,” said Woods of his constant attempts to distract Charlie when the two play. “It’s trying to get him – if I can get into his head, that means someone else can get into his head.
“It’s going to get to a point where I can’t get into his head, and then no one else can get in there either. That’s what my dad believed. You’ve got to be willing to take it.”
Woods, who will tee it up with Charlie in the PNC Championship later this month, says he came up in an era when mind games between certain golfers was prevalent on the PGA Tour – even though it seems less that way these days.
“Zing [Azinger] can attest to this, he played in an era where certain players, and we’re not going to mention anybody by name, but certain players would do certain things with clubs and shoes and timing and trying to get in your head, the early walk,” Woods added.
“That was still prevalent when I came out here, and a lot of these guys don’t know about any of that stuff, but people did it.”
Woods, who said Charlie’s game was “getting a lot better” ahead of the PNC Championship, also revealed the biggest…
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