Gary Woodland fires lowest round since brain surgery at 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge, admits ‘I probably came back too early’

After getting surgery on Sept. 18, 2023, he returned to the PGA Tour just 115 days later. Was it too soon?

FORT WORTH, Texas — Even though Gary Woodland’s first round on the PGA Tour came in 2009, the current campaign has the 2019 U.S. Open champion feeling a lot more like a sophomore than the wily veteran that he is.

The reason?

The 2024 season is the second with Gary Woodland 2.0, the player who has dealt with the symptoms from having a lesion on his brain and the after-effects of a subsequent craniotomy, a procedure that sliced his head open all the way down to his ear and cut about a baseball-sized hole in his skull to remove the majority of the tumor.

For example, Woodland’s recent appearance at the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow reminded him that he started noticing the issue during the 2023 event there, even though he finished in the top 15.

“Charlotte was the first week I went back to where I had a tournament where I had symptoms the year before and it was eye-opening for me just to be, like, I don’t feel great, but I don’t feel like I did a year ago,” Woodland said. “Like, how bad I really was, I think I’ve forgotten about some of that because I was just so thankful to be back. So the last three weeks has been a lot more pep in my step, I think, a little more excitement. I needed that.”

Woodland, 39, had won four times on the PGA Tour, but in late April of 2023, shortly after the Masters, he started feeling some troubling symptoms at the Mexico Open at Vidanta: shaking, tremors in his hands, loss of appetite, chills, no energy. It became so bad that he called his longtime doctor and begged for help to deal with his anxiety.

After getting surgery on Sept. 18, 2023, he returned to the PGA Tour just 115 days later with a strong show of support.

In retrospect, Woodland realizes that his timeline might have been abrupt.

“It’s been a process for me, just coming back,” he said. “I probably came back too early.”

And while he’s missed the cut in over half of the 13 events he’s played in prior to the 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge, Friday’s round at Colonial Country Club reminded the Kansas native how well he can play when he’s feeling his best.

Woodland made seven birdies and an eagle in the second round, finishing with a 64, his best round since the first round of the 2022 Genesis Scottish Open.

“I mean, it is what it is, but it’s just not what it was. I’m still battling, still on medication, still battling all the stuff, but probably a little more positive, I would say, the last three weeks than I was earlier this year,” Woodland said. “I think I was getting down on myself just because I didn’t feel well. There’s a lot to be positive about because I’m in a different position than I was a year ago.”

Woodland had a couple of miscues, including a bogey on a second hole which is one of the easiest on the redesigned track. But overall, he was placed with an effort that has him sitting at 4 under through two days of play, just a few shots off the lead by midday on Friday.

In fact, he expected his Texas dinner to even have a little extra flavor.

“I just put everything together. It’s been a while,” he said. “It was nice. It was nice to have all aspects. I drove it well, iron play, controlled the ball really well, and short game was nice and made some putts. It’s been a long time since I put it all together. I’ve had some rounds this year where I putted it well or drove it well, but not together. That was a big change for me.

“Will definitely make lunch and dinner taste better today.”

Photos: Gary Woodland through the years

View photos of 2019 U.S. Open champion Gary Woodland throughout his career.

A major champion, Gary Woodland has been a staple on the PGA Tour since his rookie season in 2011.

At the 2011 Bob Hope Classic, in just his second Tour start, Woodland found himself in contention, losing to Jhonattan Vegas in a playoff. Not long after, Woodland broke through, winning the Transitions Championship over Webb Simpson.

The former Kansas Jayhawk has tallied multiple wins since, most famously the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach.

With a handful of Tour wins under his belt, Woodland has also played the part of the bridesmaid 10 times with two more third place finishes in his long career.

As a pillar of the Tour, Woodland continues to be a constant name on the first page of leaderboards and likely will be for a while.

Gary Woodland’s U.S. Open reign continues, extending time to reflect on biggest win

Before he could become a U.S. Open champion, Gary Woodland had to first learn how to cope with Sunday major championship pressure.

Gary Woodland’s victory saunter about the seaside grounds of iconic Pebble Beach en route to his maiden major triumph in the 2019 U.S. Open first took considerable root in the Gateway to the West.

At Bellerive Country Club, to be exact, on the outskirts of St. Louis. In the final round of the 2018 PGA Championship. Alongside a man in a red shirt.

After taking the 36-hole lead, Woodland, who had won three PGA Tour titles but never earned a top 10 in 27 starts in a major, stood just three shots out of the lead and was in the second-to-last group with 18 to play.

Then the meat-and-potatoes bruiser from Kansas, who had rarely been shaken on any sporting field, became unsettled in the presence of Woods and the ear-splitting crowds. It was too late by the time he gathered himself, but while he didn’t win the Wanamaker Trophy, he did earn his golf doctorate.

“I got out of my element,” he said. “It was so loud. And Tiger shot 64 and was making a charge, so it got even louder. Honestly, I wasn’t even thinking about being in contention. I was thinking about playing with someone you’ve looked up to your entire life on a Sunday in a major championship and I got out of myself.

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“Lesson No. 1? Don’t ever do that again. It was the first time in my career that I lost focus on what I was doing.”

Woodland finished in a tie for sixth. But he left Bellerive with so much more.

“That day I learned in major championships, where the stage is the biggest, the noise the loudest, the pressure the most intense, that you could still control what you can control,” he said. “I learned a whole hell of a lot. That round made me 10 more years a veteran. I wouldn’t have been able to hold on at Pebble if I hadn’t been in that situation with Tiger on Sunday in St. Louis.”

Hold on he did at Pebble, and with rounds of 68-65-69-69, he made others tremble and finished three clear of major master Brooks Koepka, who was stalking a historical three-peat. Woodland did so on Father’s Day, in front of his dad, Dan, his hero who nearly died of a heart attack 10 years prior. And with his wife, Gabby, watching at home with their son and expecting identical twins.

“You couldn’t write a better script,” Woodland said.

Gary Woodland Sentry Tournament of Champions
Gary Woodland putts on the practice area with a rainbow overhead during the second round of the 2020 Sentry Tournament of Champions. Photo by Kyle Terada/USA TODAY Sports

But the script has flipped. Woodland, 36, was supposed to be in New York this week defending his title at historic Winged Foot Golf Club. Instead, he’s in South Carolina Lowcountry at Harbour Town Golf Links for the RBC Heritage.

COVID-19 got in the way, but it allows Woodland’s U.S. Open reign to continue three more months until the national open is scheduled to be contested Sept. 17-20. More time to reflect on his biggest victory to date, especially during those times he eyes the U.S. trophy in his Kansas home. To think about the emotional day above Carmel Bay when he became a major champion and was able to put some of the darkest moments of his life, which included his wife suffering two miscarriages, a bit more behind him.

And he’s afforded even more time to continue adding polish to his game that is no longer a tad one dimensional. Through extensive work with short-game gurus Pete Cowen (with his chipping) and Phil Kenyon (putting), Woodland has added impressive touch to his enormous power.

That was evident in the final round at Pebble when he uncorked an uphill, 265-yard 3-wood to set up a huge birdie on the par-5 14th – “Best swing I’ve made probably since I’ve been on Tour,” he said – and a chip from off the hour-glass green at the 17th to set up a tap-in, crucial par – “I trusted myself and the shot came off perfectly.” Then he capped his win with a 30-footer for birdie on the final hole.

Gary Woodland U.S. Open
Gary Woodland celebrates after making a birdie putt on the 18th hole to win the 2019 U.S. Open. Photo by Rob Schumacher/USA TODAY Sports

“When he got to Pebble, he had like a calmness to him all week unlike anything I had seen with him,” said his caddie, Brennan Little. “He was just in a different zone that week. What happened at Bellerive was huge.

“He’s always been a good ball-striker and has always been long. But when he started working with Pete and Phil, that’s when he put it all together. Winning at Pebble hasn’t changed him. He’s still the same guy. Except now he knows he can put it all together on the biggest stages.”

Another change is more visible – Woodland lost 25 pounds during the PGA Tour’s COVID-19 break. He plans on playing 10 of the first 13 weeks now that the Tour has resumed and wanted to be as fit as he could be.

During the down time, he also relished the time with his family. Seven weeks after winning at Pebble, Gabby gave birth to identical twin girls – Lennox and Jax. Their son, Maddox, turns 3 next week. All are healthy and happy.

“The family is great. My parents are doing well,” Woodland said. “This quarantine has been really nice, to be home and watch them grow, has been so great. It’s hard to describe how great it’s been.

“And we’re playing golf again. Life is good. It’s weird not being at Winged Foot this week and defending my title in front of the New York fans who are so great. But I hope – all us players hope – we’ll be there in three months.”

Woodland will be there as a different man. As a thinner man. As a father three times over. And as a major champion.

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Hoping to watch golf on Thanksgiving? Don’t miss Fox film recounting Woodland’s U.S. Open win

If you’re hungry to watch golf on Thanksgiving, you can tune into “2019 U.S. Open: Woodland Peaks at Pebble Beach” from Fox Sport Films.

Already counting down the days to next year’s majors?

Yes, the Masters is 134 days away. But if you’re hungry to watch some golf on Thanksgiving, you can tune into “2019 U.S. Open: Woodland Peaks at Pebble Beach” from Fox Sport Films in association with the USGA. It premieres Thursday, Nov. 28, at 4 p.m. ET immediately following the Bears-Lions game on Fox.

Narrated by actor Andy Garcia, the film follows Woodland’s run to his first major championship with exclusive footage of Woodland, his wife Gabby and their children.

It’s been a monumental year for Gary and Gabby, who welcomed twin girls into the world this summer. And the year isn’t over yet for Woodland, who will make his Presidents Cup debut in a couple weeks in Melbourne. He was one of Tiger Woods’ captain’s picks after finishing fifth at the Zozo Championship in Japan.

The Woodland film also features interviews with Justin Rose, the 2013 U.S. Open champion who entered the final round just one shot off Woodland’s lead, along with interviews from Curtis Strange, Shane Bacon, Brad Faxon and John Feinstein.

After its Thanksgiving debut, the film will re-air on FS1 eight times throughout December.

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