Blades Brown joins Tiger Woods in USGA history after winning U.S. Junior medalist honors
It has been a week for Blades Brown at the U.S. Junior Amateur, and it’s only Wednesday.
Brown, a 17-year-old from Nashville, Tennessee, shot 2-under 68 on Tuesday on the difficult South Course at Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, to earn . Shortly after, Brown got to meet who was on property to watch his son, Charlie, competing in his first USGA Championship.
For Blades, he joined Woods in an exclusive USGA club. Brown became the third person to win medalist honors at a U.S. Amateur and U.S Junior, joining Woods and Bobby Clampett. Brown won low am honors last summer at Cherry Hills Country Club in Colorado in the U.S. Amateur when he was 16.
“It gives me so much momentum and fuel and confidence,” Brown said. “But in match play anything can happen. I’m looking forward to it.”
Photos: Brown will face Alex Huang on Wednesday morning, who advanced out of a 13-for-9 playoff for the final spots in match play. The top 64 seeds advanced from stroke play.
Also among those advancing to match play is Alabama signee Chase Kyes, who has Jeff Curl as his caddie. Curl was the caddie for Nick Dunlap at both his 2021 U.S. Junior win and last summer at the U.S. Amateur.
Five of the seven members of the USGA’s inaugural U.S. National Junior Team in the field also advanced to match play. Joining Brown were Tyler Watts, Henry Guan, Michael Riebe and Miles Russell, the No. 1 junior in the American Junior Golf Association rankings.
Tiger’s teen son Charlie Woods misses cut at US Junior Amateur
Charlie Woods, the 15-year-old son of 15-time major winner Tiger Woods, fired a 10-over par 80 on Tuesday and missed the cut at the US Junior Amateur championship.
The teen Woods, who opened with an 82 on Monday, made one birdie, four bogeys, two double bogeys and a triple to finish on 22-over 162 for 36 holes at Oakland Hills Country Club in suburban Detroit.
He finished near the bottom in the field of 264 golfers, 18 strokes off the pace of 64 players who qualified for match-play competition.
Tiger Woods walked the course watching his son but tournament rules prevented him from serving as Charlie’s caddie.
The winner of Saturday’s 36-hole final captures a berth in the 2025 US Open at Oakmont.
Tiger Woods won the US Junior Amateur in 1991, 1992 and 1993. The only other player to win the crown more than once was Jordan Spieth in 2009 and 2011.
The elder and younger Woods have teamed up at the PNC Championship the past four years, finishing as the runners-up in the parent-child event in 2021.
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5 takeaways from US Junior Amateur Championship following Charlie Woods’ group
When Oakland Hills Country Club’s South Course underwent a renovation a few years back, the goal was to bring championship golf back to the historic Michigan golf course while moving in the next step of the course’s evolution.
The USGA awarded Oakland Hills eight championships to be played at the course between 2024 and 2051, starting with the U.S. Junior Amateur Championship this week.
Some of the championship atmosphere was present on the 106-year-old course on Monday and Tuesday during the stroke play portion, thanks to the large crowd following Charlie Woods, Chase Kyes and Davis Ovard. Woods, the 15-year-old son of Tiger Woods, was the main attraction for the crowd — along with his father, who walked alongside fans on both days and absorbed the action from outside the ropes.
Woods failed to make the 64-golfer cut after struggling on both days, finishing at 22-over par through 36 holes. Ovard and Kyes, both 18-year-old college golfers, had to deal with the attention alongside Woods, and finished inside the cut line to advance to match play. Ovard, a Baylor golfer, finished at 1-over while Kyes, an Alabama golfer, finished tied for third place at 4-under.
Here are some takeaways from the most popular group’s vantage point through the first two days of action, as well as a look ahead to bracket play