Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hagen’s company in Koepka’s sights

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Peter Thomson once described Americans as the “greatest collection of golfers in the world” right before he captained an Internatio­nal team that annihilate­d the U.S. in the 1998 Presidents Cup.

So what to make of his prediction at Carnoustie nine years later? Tiger Woods was going for a third consecutiv­e British Open title, a feat accomplish­ed only six times in major championsh­ip history,

most recently by Thomson in 1956.

“He has a chance to win eight in a row,” Thomson replied.

It wasn’t clear if Thomson was joking or trying to create even more attention for Woods. By the end of the week, it was a moot point as Woods tied for 12th.

Woods won majors at a faster clip than anyone. He remains the only player to win multiple majors in consecutiv­e years. But he never won the same major three consecutiv­e times.

Neither did Jack Nicklaus. The one chance he had, Nicklaus missed the cut going for a third consecutiv­e Masters. Tom Watson shared the 54hole lead at St. Andrews in 1984 in his bid for a third straight British Open. He closed with a 73 and finished two shots behind Seve Ballestero­s.

Arnold Palmer. Ben Hogan. Harry Vardon.

The list of failures is much longer than the six men who actually won the same major back-to-back-to-back.

That’s why the biggest challenge facing Brooks Koepka as he goes for a third consecutiv­e PGA Championsh­ip this week at the TPC Harding Park in San Francisco is more about history than his troublesom­e left knee and recent form.

“I just want to play good golf. It’s simple,” Koepka said when he went to Bay Area in February to preview a PGA Championsh­ip that was supposed to be held in May before the coronaviru­s pandemic upended golf’s calendar. “You start thinking about all the things that could happen, that’s when nerves, everything else kind of creeps in. Just stay in the moment and keep plugging along.”

Koepka already has had one crack at a three-peat and showed why he can’t be overlooked. Trying to become the first player in more than a century to win the U.S. Open three straight times, he chased Gary Woodland all the way to the finish line at Pebble Beach before finishing second.

Then it was all about Willie Anderson, the only player to win three consecutiv­e U.S. Opens. Now it’s about Walter Hagen, who won the PGA Championsh­ip four straight times (1924-27) when it was match play.

“Walter Hagen is a name every golf fan knows,” Koepka said. “To even have a chance to put my name with his would be incredible, and it would be super special.”

Koepka won a thriller at Bellerive in 2018, when he set the PGA Championsh­ip scoring record at 264 and matched the lowest score at any major.

He nearly blew a seven-shot lead last year at Bethpage Black before winning by two. It helped that he set the 36hole record for all majors at 128 with what he calls the best golf he ever played.

But this isn’t the same player. Koepka had stem cell treatment after last season because of a partially torn patella. Two weeks later, he slipped on a wet slab of concrete at the CJ Cup in South Korea and injured his left knee further, keeping him out for three months. And then he lost another three months to the pandemic.

He has gone a year without winning. Last week at the World Golf Championsh­ip, he said he is adjusting his swing to accommodat­e his left knee. Koepka had his best chance of winning, tied for the lead until hitting into the water off the tee on the final hole as Justin Thomas won.

For someone with this much history on the line, Koepka still has managed to avoid the spotlight in the weeks leading into the PGA Championsh­ip. Attribute that to the pandemic, and the PGA Tour’s return to golf two months ago in which positive tests — eight so far — get as much attention as birdies and bogeys.

“We’re in different times now,” said Curtis Strange, part of the ESPN broadcast team who had his shot at three straight U.S. Opens in 1990. “All sports have been put on the back burner just a little bit. I haven’t read a lot about it, and I’ve talked a couple times to reporters about three in a row. … But it would be a hell of an accomplish­ment.”

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