Charlie Woods: Renowned coach says he has "INNATE ABILITY" to fix his faults
Brad Faxon has been speaking about Tiger's son ahead of the PNC Championship.
When you're the son of Tiger Woods there is undoubtedly going to be a high level of interest in you.
Whether that's fair is up to you to draw your own conclusions. But Woods, 45, is playing alongside his son again this weekend at the PNC Championship.
Charlie, 12, certainly doesn't struggle when it comes to getting help for his game. He's worked with Mike Thomas, the father to PGA Tour star Justin Thomas, and obviously his father will help him out.
But renowned putting coach and eight-time winner on the PGA Tour has been helping him out with the flat stick. Faxon, 60, recently joined the SiriusXM PGA Tour radio show to talk about the work he has been doing.
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Faxon owns a little workshop in his garage and shared a story about how he recorded his putting stroke and asked little Tiger what he thought. "He doesn't really know much about me, but he knows I'm a good putter," Faxon said.
After rolling a few putts, Faxon asked Charlie what he thought of his putting stroke and if he had ever seen himself putting. When he was shown the video, Charlie said: "It looks like I move forward. My chest kind of guides through the ball."
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"I didn't have to say a word"
Brad Faxon tells Michael Breed a cool story about when he worked with Charlie Woods on his putting stroke.@BradFaxon I @MichaelBreed pic.twitter.com/lTt7rbQia6— SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio (@SiriusXMPGATOUR) December 14, 2021
Faxon told the station:
"How would you change that?’ So in the next putt, he made a stroke and absolutely changed it 100 per cent, and I showed it to him he was, 'that's better. I'm just gonna do that. I didn't have to say a word. And it kind of reminds me of what the great players have inside of them is that it's almost an innate ability to fix what's going wrong while it's happening."
High praise from someone who knows how to putt, and to putt well.