(AP) –A boy who was bullied for stuttering received strong encouragement from someone else who once struggled with his speech — Tiger Woods.
“I also stuttered as a child … ” Tiger Woods wrote in the letter published Tuesday by Golf Digest. “I also took a class for two years to help me, and I finally learned to stop.”
“I know what it’s like to be different and to sometimes not fit in,” Woods wrote in the letter. “I also stuttered as a child and I would talk to my dog and he would sit there and listen until he fell asleep. I also took a class for two years to help me, and I finally learned to stop.”
The plight of the high school boy, identified only as Dillon, was publicized when his mother reached out to eight-time Solheim Cup player Sophie Gustafson of Sweden, who played her entire career on the LPGA and in Europe with a severe stuttering problem.
Gustafson shared the mother’s letter with Golf Digest, which published a story on its website April 30.
The mother said her son tried out for the football team only to quit because of the constant teasing about his stutter. She wrote that he was on the verge of leaping from his bedroom window on April 16 until his parents stopped him.
Read more at ESPN

Wiley has an extensive list of who’s who friends, admirers, and fellow golfers from all walks of life. He even had Bob Hope and Telly Savalas in his circle of golfing friends at one particular time in his life, as well as close relationships with many notable athletes and celebrities in the metropolitan areas of New Jersey and New York. 
He dominated many local public courses for several years.
He won the Brooklyn Classic Golf Tournament and the Cleveland Open.



Whaley is also the PGA Director of Instruction at Suzy Whaley Golf in Cromwell, Connecticut. She made history when she was elected PGA Secretary at the PGA Annual Meeting in Indianapolis on Nov. 22, 2014, becoming the first woman to ever serve as an elected Officer of the Association that will celebrate 100 years in 2016.
Photo L-R:Florine Thompson receives instruction from Suzy Whaley
andy Cross has been a member of the PGA of America staff since 1996 and serves in the newly created position of Senior Director of Diversity & Inclusion. A native of Buffalo, New York, Cross is charged with driving the development and execution of a comprehensive, ongoing diversity and inclusion strategy for the Association.

ABOUT CHARLES CALHOUN

Tiana Jones, now a freshman in the University of Maryland Eastern Shore’s PGA Professional Golf Management University Program, turned in a 72 and 223 total for a second straight Women’s Individual Invitational title. Last year, she was victorious while playing for South Carolina State University.

Tee-Shaker was named Best New Product by the PGA Merchandise Show and rightly so. It will keep you focused on your golf game, rather than looking for tees. It costs average not more than the price of two golf balls. So, there’s no reason not to have a couple of these around for you use on the golf course, and to give a couple to friends. For organizatons, the Tee-Shaker is customizable and can hold a variety of colors and designs. Major corporations have benefited from the product including Pepsi, Coca-Cola, Mercedes, The US Army and many Fortune 500 companies. Perhaps your next golf tournament could benefit, too!





