LeBron James Has Wild Reaction to Viral Video of Tiger Woods’ Son

There was a lot of hype surrounding Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James in 2003. LeBron was the biggest wunderkind to enter the world of professional sports. However, Tiger Woods was a wunderkind way before LeBron. Woods was a dominant force in golf. He won his first major tournament in 1997 and stayed on top of every list for a really long time. Many would agree that LeBron sees Woods as “something of a kindred spirit.” Great LeBron James respects greatness and you can tell that by his reaction to a viral video featuring Woods and his son Charlie.

In the video, Woods plays golf with his 11-year-old son in the PNC Championship in Orlando. It’s a tournament featuring former stars and their families. The video went viral, and LeBron’s reaction was priceless.

Charlie Woods knocked a long fairway shot within a few feet of the hole and punched in the putt for an angle.

LeBron was more than impressed. Everyone was impressed. Little Woods has great talent. He got the good genes from his dad.

LeBron James has expected reaction to Woods’ viral video

Charlie and his famous dad shot a 10-under 62 in the tournament. ESPN and other sources confirmed the numbers. This tied them sixth on the leaderboard. Did Charlie carry his dad?

“He did,” Woods said. “He hit some of the most incredible golf shots. Had the best time. It couldn’t have been a better environment.”

LeBron and Woods respect each other. The golf legend is a fan of LeBron. King James made 10 NBA Finals appearances and won four titles. He helped the Lakers win their title this past season.

“To dominate something is one thing,” Woods said of LeBron in 2018. “Every player out here can have one good week and blow away the field. OK, great. Now, can you do it for month? Can you do it for a year? Now, do it for a decade. Do it for a decade-plus. Then start separating what is truly great, and in our sport, there has been a few guys that have had runs that have lasted for well over a decade and into two. And that’s what separates greatness.”