Their dad might be one of the most famous men on the planet, but Sam and Charlie Woods are just like other siblings.
Tiger is enjoying the privilege of playing alongside son Charlie at the PNC Championship.
And he has the added bonus of Sam on caddie du🐻ties in a family day on the course.
Tiger and 15-year-old Charlie tore up the ♈front nine with a series of𒐪 birdies.
Woods Jr. - looking every bit his father's son - hit an approach most golfers would be proud on the ninth.
But ever the perfectionist, he was not h𒈔appy with his effort and the micropho🌌ne picked up his comments.
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"Pleas🌟e hit it more solid than me," Charlie said as Tiger lined up his own shot from the𒆙 same spot.
"You're so negative," said elder sister Sam to leave the commentators chuckling away.
Charlie ended up making a birdie putt to go six under - maybe his 17🌟-year-old sibling knows🃏 best after all.
The tee𒀰n beat✨ his dad for the first time on Friday.
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“Yeah, he beat me for nine holes,” told reporters, per the PGA Tour.
“He has yet to beat me for 18 holes," he quickly clarifie🐼d. "Thaওt day is coming, I’m just prolonging it for as long as I possibly can.”
Woods and Charlie played the pro-am yesterday ahead of this weekend's PNC Championship, which sees golfers team up with their kids.
“It was just a fun day to be out here playing again, and looking forward to the weekend,” Woods, who is returning from a sixth back operation, said.
“I’ve had a ꦯlot of procedures over the course of time. I’m not going to feel what I u꧅sed to feel.
"🌠;And the recovery is going to be on the harder side. I can go for a day here or there, but over the course of rounds, weeks, months, it just෴ gets harder.”
This will be th💫e fifth time 🍌Team Woods plays at the two-day, 36-hole competition.
It features 20 major champions and their family members - Tiger and Charlie's best finish is runners-up.
The 15-ti🌺me Major winner revealed t🦹he fatherly advice he gives to his son.
“I just always remind him, ‘Just be you.’ Charlie is Charlie," he said. "Yes he’s my son, he’s gonꦓna have that last name as part of the sport.
"But I just want him to just be 🍒himself, you k♛now, and be your own person.
"That’s what we’ll always focus on, and we’ll always encourage it, for him just to carve his own name, to carve his own path and have hi✨s own j𓃲ourney.”