Gary Woodland during the The Memorial Tournament on June 4, 2021, in Dublin, Ohio.Photo:Andy Lyons/GettyGary Woodlandis recovering after having surgery to remove a lesion on his brain.In an update shared to social media Monday, the professional golfer, 39, was said to be “resting” after “the majority of the tumor” was removed in the operation, which took place earlier in the day.“After a long surgery, the majority of the tumor has been removed and he is currently resting,” a statementposted on X(formerly known as Twitter) and Woodland’s Instagram read.“At this time, the family requests space and privacy to be together,”the post continued. “Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers as he gets started on the road to recovery.”The statement signed off with, “Team GW.”Woodland announced in August that he would be having brain surgery to remove a lesion.“I was diagnosed a few months ago and have been trying to treat symptoms with medication,” hewrote in a post. “After consulting with multiple specialists and discussing with my family, we’ve made the decision that surgery to remove the lesion is the best course of action.”At the time, Woodland did not specify the type of lesion he had, but said the procedure would take place on Sept. 18.The PGA Tour added that he was in “good spirits” following the support of his family and friends, and shared thanks to fans for their support also.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.The golfing and sporting communities have rallied behind Woodland following the latest update shared on his health and recovery.“Get well soon, Gary! 🙏🏼,” golfer and social-media starKarin Hartresponded in the comment section, as PGA Tour’sBilly Horschelwrote, “ 🙏🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️.”Basketball analystJay Bilasadded, “Get well, Gary! ❤️🙏.”Woodland began his professional golfing career in 2007 after switching from a basketball scholarship to a golf one in college. The Kansas native has clinched four PGA wins, including the U.S. Open in 2019.Gary Woodland plays in the 2023 Masters Tournament on April 8, 2023, in Augusta, Georgia.Ross Kinnaird/GettyIn 2018, he won the Waste Management Phoenix Open. A year later, at the same tournament, he asked Special Olympian Amy Bockerstette to join him on the par-3 16th hole in a practice round.Bockerstette, 24, went viralfor making the challenging hole, telling Woodland, “I got this,” before succeeding the shot.Woodland’s last Instagram post before revealing his scheduled surgery plans was in April, as he shareda promotional videowith PUMA Golf.“Lacin’ up for the first major of the year. Bring on Rd. 1 in Georgia,” he wrote in his caption.

Gary Woodland during the The Memorial Tournament on June 4, 2021, in Dublin, Ohio.Photo:Andy Lyons/Getty

Gary Woodland of the United States walks off the second tee during the second round of The Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club on June 04, 2021 in Dublin, Ohio

Andy Lyons/Getty

Gary Woodlandis recovering after having surgery to remove a lesion on his brain.In an update shared to social media Monday, the professional golfer, 39, was said to be “resting” after “the majority of the tumor” was removed in the operation, which took place earlier in the day.“After a long surgery, the majority of the tumor has been removed and he is currently resting,” a statementposted on X(formerly known as Twitter) and Woodland’s Instagram read.“At this time, the family requests space and privacy to be together,”the post continued. “Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers as he gets started on the road to recovery.”The statement signed off with, “Team GW.”Woodland announced in August that he would be having brain surgery to remove a lesion.“I was diagnosed a few months ago and have been trying to treat symptoms with medication,” hewrote in a post. “After consulting with multiple specialists and discussing with my family, we’ve made the decision that surgery to remove the lesion is the best course of action.”At the time, Woodland did not specify the type of lesion he had, but said the procedure would take place on Sept. 18.The PGA Tour added that he was in “good spirits” following the support of his family and friends, and shared thanks to fans for their support also.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.The golfing and sporting communities have rallied behind Woodland following the latest update shared on his health and recovery.“Get well soon, Gary! 🙏🏼,” golfer and social-media starKarin Hartresponded in the comment section, as PGA Tour’sBilly Horschelwrote, “ 🙏🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️.”Basketball analystJay Bilasadded, “Get well, Gary! ❤️🙏.”Woodland began his professional golfing career in 2007 after switching from a basketball scholarship to a golf one in college. The Kansas native has clinched four PGA wins, including the U.S. Open in 2019.Gary Woodland plays in the 2023 Masters Tournament on April 8, 2023, in Augusta, Georgia.Ross Kinnaird/GettyIn 2018, he won the Waste Management Phoenix Open. A year later, at the same tournament, he asked Special Olympian Amy Bockerstette to join him on the par-3 16th hole in a practice round.Bockerstette, 24, went viralfor making the challenging hole, telling Woodland, “I got this,” before succeeding the shot.Woodland’s last Instagram post before revealing his scheduled surgery plans was in April, as he shareda promotional videowith PUMA Golf.“Lacin’ up for the first major of the year. Bring on Rd. 1 in Georgia,” he wrote in his caption.

Gary Woodlandis recovering after having surgery to remove a lesion on his brain.

In an update shared to social media Monday, the professional golfer, 39, was said to be “resting” after “the majority of the tumor” was removed in the operation, which took place earlier in the day.

“After a long surgery, the majority of the tumor has been removed and he is currently resting,” a statementposted on X(formerly known as Twitter) and Woodland’s Instagram read.

“At this time, the family requests space and privacy to be together,”the post continued. “Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers as he gets started on the road to recovery.”

The statement signed off with, “Team GW.”

Woodland announced in August that he would be having brain surgery to remove a lesion.

“I was diagnosed a few months ago and have been trying to treat symptoms with medication,” hewrote in a post. “After consulting with multiple specialists and discussing with my family, we’ve made the decision that surgery to remove the lesion is the best course of action.”

At the time, Woodland did not specify the type of lesion he had, but said the procedure would take place on Sept. 18.

The PGA Tour added that he was in “good spirits” following the support of his family and friends, and shared thanks to fans for their support also.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.

The golfing and sporting communities have rallied behind Woodland following the latest update shared on his health and recovery.

“Get well soon, Gary! 🙏🏼,” golfer and social-media starKarin Hartresponded in the comment section, as PGA Tour’sBilly Horschelwrote, “ 🙏🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️.”

Basketball analystJay Bilasadded, “Get well, Gary! ❤️🙏.”

Woodland began his professional golfing career in 2007 after switching from a basketball scholarship to a golf one in college. The Kansas native has clinched four PGA wins, including the U.S. Open in 2019.

Gary Woodland plays in the 2023 Masters Tournament on April 8, 2023, in Augusta, Georgia.Ross Kinnaird/Getty

Gary Woodland of the United States plays his shot from the fourth tee during the third round of the 2023 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 08, 2023

Ross Kinnaird/Getty

In 2018, he won the Waste Management Phoenix Open. A year later, at the same tournament, he asked Special Olympian Amy Bockerstette to join him on the par-3 16th hole in a practice round.

Bockerstette, 24, went viralfor making the challenging hole, telling Woodland, “I got this,” before succeeding the shot.

Woodland’s last Instagram post before revealing his scheduled surgery plans was in April, as he shareda promotional videowith PUMA Golf.

“Lacin’ up for the first major of the year. Bring on Rd. 1 in Georgia,” he wrote in his caption.

source: people.com