The father-son duo Tiger Woods and Charlie Woods returned to Orlando for the annual PNC Championship over the weekend. The PNC Championship was all about seeing the famous golfers and their kids together hitting the links together. One of the reasons that made the tournament more worthy is a father enjoying his son’s ability and desire and a son admiring and remembering his father’s achievement. Tiger also in his interview with reporters told-
“Any time I get a chance to spend time with my son, it’s always special,” “And to do it in a competitive forum, the last couple of years have been magical, and to be able to do it again, we’re looking forward to it.”
However, Vijay Singh and his son Qass were the winners of the 2022 PNC Championship, Tiger Wood as a father enjoys bonding with his son. They as a pair are delighted to watch perhaps unique only to golf, a sport in which an 11-year-old son with 87-year-old father can compete in the same tournament.
Charlie’s statement about his dad’s performance made Tiger laugh- “I feel like I already knew what he was capable of and then yesterday, that’s the best he’s ever played in a while and that kind of shocked me a little bit,”
Tiger laughed and said- “I used to be good,” “Again, it was neat to be able to roll back the clock for him to see what I used to be capable of. … Anyone that knows what I used to be able to do was Bones. Bones got a big kick out of that yesterday.”
Even when the reporters asked Tiger about the exception of the game he replied- “The bonding, by far,” adding on to say – “Just to be able to be out there and share this with Charlie and for [caddie] Joey {LaCava], to share it with his son, as well. Joey has been out here for what, 35, 40 years, and to be able to show his son what it feels like to be inside the ropes, he was — you know, he was fantastic with Charlie the three years that we’ve been able to play last year and for us, sharing it with our own family. It just means so much to all of us.”
The beauty of the event is the father-son relationship that extends beyond the scoreboard and the end of a tournament. The championship means more than anything else to the Tiger as it provides the very thing that he is deprived of over the last 25 years of his career.