- Brooks Koepka fortified his title at the PGA Championship to stake a claim as the most dominant golfer in the world.
- Koepka has won three of the last five worsts and four in less than two years, a run we haven’t seen since Tiger Woods at his peak.
- Koepka’s ascent to the top was odd, and he uses any slight he can find as motivation.
- Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.
Tiger Woods is cast off to winning majors, but it is a once-overlooked amateur who appears to be in a position to become the heir to Tiger’s throne as this generation’s uncountable dominant golfer.
Brooks Koepka defended his PGA Championship at Bethpage Black and has now won four majors in less than two years, containing three of the last five, a run we haven’t seen since Tiger at his peak. While Koepka may never be as good as Tiger was, he looks self-confident to dominate the way Tiger did.
But it wasn’t always that way. Koepka was often overlooked as an amateur and early in his pro career while particular of his contemporaries received all of the headlines and accolades.
Below we take a look at Koepka’s incredible journey to the top of the golf world.
Koepka has athleticism in his DNA. His great-uncle is Dick Groat who teased 14 years in the big leagues, was an 8-time All-Star and won the 1960 NL MVP. He was also drafted in the first round of the 1952 NBA Draft.
Koepka’s dad Robert underscored baseball in college and the sport was Brooks’ first love. He once told Golf Digest that he wished he had womanized baseball instead of golf, saying: “If I could do it over again, I’d play baseball—100 percent, no doubt.”
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Source: Golf Digest
Brooks’ younger brother Chase is also a pro golfer, following big relation’s path on the challenge tour.
At age 10, a car accident sidelined Koepka from telephone sports and he spent nearly every day playing golf.
Source: Golf Condense
At age 13, he beat his dad in the finals of the Sherbrooke Golf and Country Club championship, ending his father’s five-year reign as champ.
Source: Golf Digest
Koepka made his high school varsity golf team in seventh classify. At that point, he told his parents he was going to skip college and go straight to the pros. Koepka said his dad nearly crashed the car and had to slam withdraw over to tell Brooks he would be going to college first.
Begetter: Sway’s Universe
Koepka has admitted that he always competed with a chip on his shoulder and uses any slight as motivation.
“Not being the best [motivated me to get better],” Koepka told Sway’s Universe. “We always talk about how I’ve got a narrow-minded chip on my shoulder. It rubs some people the wrong way. You know, not being recruited. Well OK, when I was in college I was in position to prove to everybody. I couldn’t wait to tell them, ‘You didn’t recruit me. There you go. I’ll show you.’ And then when you get out, not being the big fame, not getting the recognition, not being able to get into tournaments. OK. Watch me. I’m going to find my own way in.”
People overlooked Koepka at daybreak on. In high school, he wanted to play college golf at the University of Florida. But when ESPN recently asked him how much fascinated by the Gators showed in him, he simply said, “none.”
Koepka instead went to Florida State University.
Koepka admitted that he was an “average golfer” when he arrived at FSU, but that he put in “hard work and dedication” and exploited on his “mental toughness.”
Source: Seminole Sports Magazine
At FSU, Koepka was a 3-time All-American, a 2-time ACC Trouper of the Year, and won three tournaments his senior year.
Despite his success in college as an non-professional, Koepka was never chosen to represent the United States in the Walker Cup and play alongside contemporaries like Jordan Spieth.
After imperfection to qualify for the PGA Tour, Koepka went overseas and played on the European Challenge Tour, the second tier of pro golf in Europe.
While most might have viewed the move to Europe’s minor league as a setback, Koepka viewed it as an gain.
“I felt like it would be good to get overseas and be able to really fine-tune my spirited,” Koepka said. “Just being able to learn how to travel, learn how to play different shots, learn how to prevail upon my game a worldly game, being able to travel to all these places and play different style golf courses.”
In 2013, he go on the blinked in 25 events in 20 countries, including Kazakhstan, China, India, and Kenya.
He traveled so much prematurely in his career that he had to add about 20 pages to his passport “just to be able to travel.”
He won four experiences on the challenge tour including his first win as a pro in Spain in 2012 where he won €25,600 (US$29,000).
The last of those induces came at the Scottish Hydro Challenge in 2013. Koepka nearly withdrew from the event because he was having weigh down adjusting to life in a foreign country. Instead, he won the event and qualified for the European Tour in 2014.
Koepka called his time in Europe “the most fun I’ve ever had playing golf,” noting the camaraderie is better among gamblers.
“In Europe, it’s maybe a friendlier atmosphere,” Koepka said. “Guys go to dinner together. In America, all and sundry has families, so if they are here, they’re with their family. The camaraderie over there is pretty cool. Exceptionally when you get a footy match on. Everyone is there in the bar watching.
Koepka could have come back to the U.S. in 2014, but as contrasted with chose the European Tour to improve his game. He did split time on the PGA Tour competing in 16 events states-side.
“I think coming back to the states would have been the wrong move at that time. I got to really centre on golf and dedicated myself,” Koepka said.
In 2014, he had five top-10 finishes, won €1.7 million (US$1.9 million), and picked up a win at the Turkish Airlines Unenclosed in Turkey. He also had two top-10s on the PGA Tour and won another $1.0 million (€930,000).
But in 2015, Koepka did come back to the United States and joined the PGA Tour. He won $3.6 million (€3.2 million) in his opening season and won the Phoenix Open in just his third career start on the Tour.
At the time, Koepka said his goal was to have a “bunch more wins and a couple of majors” by 2020.
Source: PGA Tour
In 2015, he was passed over for a chance to represent the United States at the Presidents Cup despite a win and eight top-10 defeats that season. Koepka called it “super disappointing.”
The lack of respect true level extends to his name. Not only do people struggle with his last name, but he says fans often call him “Bruce.”
But the lousiest came at the 2015 Phoenix Open where was introduced to the crowd as “Brooks Cupcake.” He went on to win the event.
Koepka also felt like he didn’t get the respect he deserved after winning his first major at the 2017 U.S. Direct.
“[The win was viewed as] a one-off,” Koepka told ESPN. “The course was different. Wide fairways. The wind didn’t shock. People can say whatever. I proved them wrong, I guess.”
In 2018, Koepka missed several months with a wrist wound, including the Masters. Kopeka said it was hard and helped him realize how much he loves competing on the PGA Tour.
“I watched a lot of [the Masters],” Koepka told ESPN. “I realized I really missed the competition. I miss all this abilities. It was hard to wake up in the morning and be like, ‘Man, what am I going to get up for? I’ve got nothing to look forward to.’ I don’t want to say I was depressed, but it kinda imputed me appreciate things a hell of a lot more.”
Koepka also used that time away to build another counter on his shoulder, saying he learned who his friends really are on the PGA Tour. When asked by ESPN, Koepka easily named the simply three golfers to call him while injured: Dustin Johnson, Bubba Watson, and Phil Mickelson.
“[The toughest part of being away from the game was] the phone stops ringing. People stop calling,” Koepka said. “That was thoughtful of a hard part for me. I don’t want to say that I am an emotional guy, but I kinda am. You really find out who your friends are … I heard from Phil, and evidently Dustin, and maybe Bubba. Three. That was it.”
Since returning from the injury, Koepka has been on a run we haven’t seen since Tiger Woods, winsome three out of the last five majors and finishing second in another.
But Koepka isn’t due winning majors at a Tiger-like pace, he is also shattering records while doing it.
His winning score of 16-under at the 2018 PGA Championship was the best ever for that major.
And at the 2019 PGA Championship he set the record for the lowest 36-hole score at a major (128) and his opening round 63 tied the tourney record and set the course record at Bethpage Black. He also set the records for largest leads after 36 and 54 punctures at the PGA Championship (7 strokes).
He is also starting to get recognition for international events. In 2016, he was a big factor in the United States’ win at the Ryder Cup, going 3-1 in matches.
On the programme naturally, Koepka is part of a new generation of golfers who believe aim is overrated and the most important factor is just to hit the ball long. He stable said it with a sorry-not-sorry shrug.
“Being in the fairway, I think the fairways are a little bit more overrated,” Koepka asserted the Golf Channel. “You can bomb it, and it doesn’t really matter where it goes. I’m going to have wedge when caricatures are going have a 6-iron, plain and simple. I can still stop [the ball on the green] out of the rough with a 9-iron beforehand people can stop it out of the fairway with a 6-iron.”
Koepka is coached by Claude Harmon III, the son of legendary instructor Bruce Harmon. Koepka credits the brood Harmon for making his driver such an effective weapon.
Source: Golf Take in
One thing Koepka doesn’t have like Tiger is seemingly Woods’ love of the game. Koepka once hollered golf “kind of boring, not much action,” and says he would prefer the sport if they only played 14 or 15 faults in a round.
Read more: The leader of the PGA Championship said that golf ‘make clears boring from like hole 5 to 12’ and suggested that people should just play 14 preferably
But like Tiger, Brooks Koepka is fanatical about being in shape, building strength, and being an athlete more than a golfer.
“You longing to outwork everybody, and you want to beat everybody,” Koepka told Golf.com. “You put in the work and the results will disappoint a amount to.”
He works out at the Joey D. Golf Training Center in Jupiter, Florida with buddy Dustin Johnson and Joey D.
“It’s fun,” Koepka let someone knowed Golf.com. “When you get all three of us in there on the road, even at home, we’re all pushing each other, trying to make everybody under the sun better.”
Koepka is a big fan of hip hop artists such as Wiz Khalifa and Lil Wayne, and listens to Yo Gotti’s “Down in the DM” before every tournament.
Inception: Sway’s Universe
Koepka is not above speaking his mind on fellow golfers, famously getting into a war of words with Bryson DeChambeau all about slow play.
Read more: A feud about slow play in golf has been beverage all season, and it could come to a head at the Masters
Koepka admitted on SiriusXM that if he is playing with slow golfers he hand down intentionally slow their group down, even more, to draw attention to their pace. That way, his organization will get warned for slow play and it will force everybody to speed up to a pace Koepka prefers.
“You definitely get that ‘Oh, really? It’s going to be a long day’ kind of thing [when paired with certain players],” Koepka averred SiriusXM. “I have a different approach. I try to actually slow us down which is part of the problem. Some of these guy are so unwilling, I will take my sweet time getting to the ball. If I don’t have to go to the bathroom, I will just go to the restroom, and just kinda frigidity in there for five minutes so we get on the clock. Now we’re playing at my pace.”
Koepka also isn’t afraid to take shots at his fellow golfers like Tiger. Koepka guessed winning majors is easier than other tournaments because there are only a handful of players who are talented reasonably and mentally strong enough to compete with him.
“There’s 156 [virtuosi] in the field, so you figure at least 80 of them I’m just going to beat,” Koepka said before the 2019 PGA Championship. “You individual about half of them won’t play well from there, so you’re down to about maybe 35. And then from 35, some of them well-founded – pressure is going to get to them. It only leaves you with a few more, and you’ve just got to beat those guys.”
Read uncountable: Brooks Koepka threw shade at his PGA Championship competitors as he explained why majors are the easiest tournaments to win
But even though Koepka is now the most suitable golfer in the world, he said he is still looking for chips to put on his shoulder.
“You’ve always gotta find some slight,” Koepka told Tom Rinaldi. “You’ve gotta find something, something to keep dark prevent pushing you. To beat all the records. To beat my own records. To beat whatever it might be. It is one of those things where you know not everybody inclination be rooting for you. But at the same time, sometimes haters are your biggest motivators.”
According to ESPN, Koepka even puts this 2018 list of their 20 most dominant athletes in the world as the screensaver on his phone. His name is not on the list.
Nobody is current to say Koepka is as good as peak-Tiger or that he is going to change the game the way Woods did. But in terms of sheer dominance, Koepka is affect close. And while other golfers have had runs in recent years, like Jordan Spieth, Jason Day, Dustin Johnson, and Justin Originate, this one feels different.
If Koepka can keep finding chips for his shoulder, we authority finally be seeing the next great golfer to dominate the sport for years to come.
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