The Scotsman

Players pay Masters ‘too much respect’ – Koepka

- Martin Dempster

Brooks Koepka reckons players pay Augusta National "too much respect" on the strength of tales of horror about the Georgia venue's slopey greens and is set to take dead aim in his bid to prove that in this week's Masters.

The four-time major winner is making his fi ft happearanc­e in the reschedule­d major, having been in the Green Jacket mix on the back nine last year before finishin gina tie for second, one shot behind Tiger Woods.

Prior tot hat,Koe pk a's best effort had been a share of 11 th position in 2017 and, though by no means an old hand, he is now starting to feel comfortabl­e playing the Alister Mackenzie-designed course and, equally imp ortant, having his own opinion about the best way to tackle the test.

“I think people actually respect it a little too much sometimes ," saidKoe pk a, who is among the favourites for the event' s first staging in November, having been postponed in April due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

"You try to hit all these slope sand shots which I guess are crowd p leasers, but a lot of times it’s as simple as aim at the flag and if you pull it or push it, it catches the slope.

“There are different ways to get to the hole and you don’t always need to use the slope. You know, if you’ re aiming at the slope and pull it or push it, you’ve missed it.

"So I think sometime it’ s just being aggressive as you normally would, don’t try to respect it so much and see what other guys do. They’re looking to catch the slopes and things like that, but you can honestly be really aggressive.

“I just figured that out the more and more I played it. You’ d listen to guys saying ‘with this pin you have to bring it off that slope’ but you don’t have to. You can just hit right at it and it’ s not going to go there. Aiming two feet next to the flag is fine."

Koe pk a, who used a win in the 2013 Scottish C hallen g eat Macd on aldSpey Valley in A vie more as a spring board to become a world No 1, though he’ s now down at No 12, missed last month' s US Open due to recurring knee injuries. He also had sit out the 2018 Masters due to injury, but, on the back of last year's strong performanc­e, is feeling quietly confident about his chances this time around.

Hitting those greens is just part of the test, of course, as a silky touch is required to hole putts on them. “There’s definitely putts on the golf course where you could have 10 feet and it looks like it’s a right edge putt but really it’s a left edge putt," he added.

“There’ s little things like that where I think the knowledge comes in. But there’s just a couple of places where it doesn’ t break. If you practice enough and hit the putts you should then, you’ll know that.

“You do your homework. You’ re watching other guys hit putts and they say, 'wow I can’t believe that happened'. So you’ll see it.”

One big difference about this year' s event will beth eabsence of patrons, with the event behi nd played behind closed doors due to ongoing corona virus restrictio­ns. It will be an eerie scene when the two honorary starters, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player, get the event underway on Thursday.

For Koepka, though, it will feel like business as usual. “I just feel excitement on the first tee, I don’t get nervous," he said. If you’re going to be nervous on the first tee, you’d might as well be nervous on the rest of them.

“I can see that the first time I played, yes I was a little nervous then, but, after that, it’ s just been excitement and feeling ready to go." In last year' s title tussle, Koe pk a followed a doubleboge­y 5 at the 12 thin the fin al roundwi than eagle -3 at the next. He remained in the hunt with a birdie at the 15 th but was unable to hole any clutch putts down the stretch as he finished a shot behind winner Woods.

"I mean, just putting yourself in contention again, that was really the big thing I got out of it," he recalled. "It's just one of those things where I feel like if I hadn't backed off it on 12, I hit a good shot, just I think we all know that wind swirls quite a bit there.

"The other big thing is, too, I think Tiger made it look a lot closer than it was. It was one shot but he had a two-shot lead coming up the last and all he had to do was make bogey to win and it' s a lot easier. He played it where he took double out of play and gave himself a look at par, almost made it. He did everything right.

On 16, leaving it on that shelf was kind of a screw up for me, but it is what it is. I played good. There' s some weeks we just get beat."

The 30-year-old is halfway to the career grand slam Rory Mcilroy, pictured, is chasing this week, having won the US Open in both 2017 and 2018 and the US PGA in both 2018 and 2019.

"Both of them," he replied, smiling, to being asked if he had to choose from the other two he's not won yet. “I’ll take my six pack.”

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 ??  ?? 0 Brooks Koepka is among the favourites to win the first-ever staging of the Masters in November.
0 Brooks Koepka is among the favourites to win the first-ever staging of the Masters in November.

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