At just 16 years old, the son of golf legend Tiger Woods had recently captured his first major national tournament win, turning heads and fueling chatter that he might be following closely in his father’s footsteps. But on Monday at theU.S. Junior Amateur Championshipin Dallas, that narrative hit a bump in the road.

Woods posted an 11-over-par 81 in his opening round at Brook Hollow Golf Club, landing him in a tie for 241st out of 264 players. It was a score that surprised many-not just because of the number, but because of how it came together.

A Tale of Two Nines

Things didn’t start off catastrophically. Charlie opened with a bogey on the first and a double bogey on the third, but he found a groove with four straight pars. After a bogey on eight, he bounced back with a confident birdie on the ninth to finish the front nine at 3-over 38.

It was the kind of recovery that suggested he might steady the ship. But then came the back nine.

Bogeys on 10 and 11 were followed by a messy double on 13. He couldn’t stop the bleeding, adding more bogeys on 15 and 16, then another double on 17. Though he capped the round with a birdie on 18, the damage had already piled up.

This wasn’t just a tough round-it was a reminder.

Charlie’s Journey is Still Just Beginning

Comparisons to Tiger, who won this same event three times in the early ’90s, are tempting-but probably not useful right now. Charlie’s recent win at the Team TaylorMade Invitational (an event where current U.S. Junior leader Tyler Watts finished fifth) showed his potential. But pressure, especially at this level, is its own challenge.

“He’s growing. This is part of the process,” said one junior coach familiar with Woods’ game. “One bad day doesn’t erase talent.”

Tyler Watts, who carded a smooth 5-under in his opening round, currently tops the leaderboard. His performance offers a contrast, but not a verdict.

Charlie Woods isn’t Tiger. And that’s okay. What he is, is a young golfer still figuring it out-under a spotlight most players his age will never feel. Let’s give him the room to do just that.

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