The Standard (St. Catharines)

Koepka ready to get back to work after layoff

PGA Championsh­ip winner says knee feels stable enough to compete

- DOUG FERGUSON

HONOLULU — Brooks Koepka hasn’t been the same since he tied for third in the FedEx Cup final in August, and hasn’t felt entirely healthy since last March.

He wouldn’t rate himself full strength now.

Koepka returns to competitio­n this week in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip, his first tournament since he reinjured his left knee in South Korea at the CJ Cup. He said Tuesday his left knee “doesn’t feel the same as my right.”

“It probably won’t for a while, but it does feel stable,” Koepka said. “Leaving Korea and all the way up to about a month ago, it just didn’t feel stable. It felt like it could go either way. It could go left, out, back.”

Koepka says he’s had issues since March and just dealt with them. He still managed to win the PGA Championsh­ip for the second straight year and pick up his first World Golf Championsh­ip. During his short offseason, Koepka had stem cell treatment on his left knee because the patella tendon was partially torn.

Then, he was walking off a tee when he slipped on a wet piece of cement, went to brace himself from falling and reinjured the knee. He said his knee cap moved into the fat pad, which he described as “excruciati­ng.”

He had physical therapy in San Diego for most of December and says he started hitting balls right before Christmas. Koepka said he wouldn’t have flown to the United Arab Emirates if he didn’t feel healthy, and that his speed and everything else about his game were the same as before he was hurt at the CJ Cup.

“From that moment on, after a couple days of hitting balls and not feeling pain, it was like, ‘OK, I could get back here and do this and finally play,’ ” he said.

A name from the past

The first player of note from an emerging golf nation is not always the best one. As Li Haotong of China was making his debut at the Presidents Cup, Guan Tianlang was preparing to qualify for the PGA Tour Series-China.

Guan, who won the Asia-Pacific Amateur and then made the cut at the Masters and Zurich Classic when he was 14, made it through. Despite closing with a 79, he tied for 10th last week to earn full status for the season in China.

Guan is a sophomore at Arizona and is still an amateur.

“I think I will turn pro soon,” he said, adding there was a “good chance” he would play China’s opening tournament. “But I still need some time to think about everything. I might also balance school and play profession­al events.”

Guan says he expected some highs and lows after his Masters performanc­e. “I think that I’m trending in the right direction now,” he said.

G-Mac style

Graeme McDowell can add his name to the list of players who went searching for distance and lost sight of their game.

McDowell was enthusiast­ic at the Sony Open, and that was before he closed with rounds of 67-64 for the best weekend score at wet Waialae. It gave him a tie for fourth, his best finish since winning in the Dominican Republic last spring.

He attributes that to getting back to his normal flight with irons.

McDowell started working in August with Kevin Kirk, also the swing coach for Patrick Reed.

“The first thing I said was I’ve got to start hitting it lower again,” McDowell said. “I’m not playing the wind anymore. That was my bread and butter.”

He still works with Pete Cowen, but McDowell said their schedules didn’t mesh as much with McDowell out of the top 50 and not playing in all the majors or World Golf Championsh­ips.

Where did he lose his way? “It probably came from trying to launch the drive too high in a little search for a wee bit of distance,” he said. “I got an iron in my hand, it was vertical. That’s not me. I need to hit the ball back down to a good window.”

For two weeks in the Hawaii wind, he said he was “back to G-Mac style.”

Short road, long shot

For the host country of the Tokyo Olympics, Hideki Matsuyama (No. 21) and Shugo Imahira (No. 33) are the leading candidates to represent Japan.

Next in line is Ryo Ishikawa at No. 83. Ishikawa showed signs of getting back to form last year when he won three times on the Japan Golf Tour, his first titles since 2016 and his biggest year in Japan since 2010. The problem facing him now is a schedule.

Ishikawa is part of a solid field this week in the Singapore Open, co-sanctioned by Japan. Among those playing are Justin Rose, Henrik Stenson and Matt Kuchar. Otherwise, the Japan Golf Tour season doesn’t start until a week after the Masters. That would leave Ishikawa only six events on his home tour before the cut off for the Olympics.

Ishikawa is looking for sponsor exemptions, with his eye on the Genesis Invitation­al at Riviera and perhaps the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al at Bay Hill. He made his U.S. debut at Riviera in 2009 when he was 17.

Stat of the week

Lanto Griffin was 7-under par on the 18th hole of the Sony Open. He played the other 68 holes in 1 under.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Golfer Brooks Koepka returns to competitio­n this week in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip, his first tournament since he reinjured his left knee in South Korea at the CJ Cup.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Golfer Brooks Koepka returns to competitio­n this week in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip, his first tournament since he reinjured his left knee in South Korea at the CJ Cup.

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