Call & Times

Koepka has work to do for playoffs

- By DOUG FERGUSON

The question was perplexing to Brooks Koepka, perhaps because it was missing specific context or because it takes a lot to make him worry. He was asked going into the RBC Heritage at Hilton Head if he felt any sense of urgency.

“Urgency for what?” he replied.

Koepka missed three months after a knee injury in October when he slipped on wet concrete at the CJ Cup in South Korea and had to withdraw. When he returned, he played five times — his only top-20 finish was a tie for 17th in Saudi Arabia — and then the COVID-19 pandemic shut down golf for three months.

Having played only four PGA Tour events, he was No. 213 in the FedEx Cup standings.

The only time he didn’t make it to East Lake for the FedEx Cup finale was in 2015, when he missed a month with an ankle injury. He finished 35th. Koepka was unaware that history is working against him this year. In the last 10 years, Jim Furyk is the only player to be outside the top 200 in the FedEx Cup standings with nine events remaining and reach the postseason.

“I just go play golf, just keep doing what I’m doing,” Koepka said that day. “I feel like I’m playing good, so eventually it will come.”

He closed with a 65 at Harbour Town to finish seventh and moved up 56 spots to No. 148. And then he withdrew the following week from the Travelers Championsh­ip out of caution when his caddie, Ricky Elliott, tested positive for the coronaviru­s. He returns to the Workday Charity Open this week having slipped seven spots to No. 155.

Six tournament­s are on the schedule between now and the start of the FedEx Cup playoffs. Furyk in 2016 turned it around with a runner-up finish at the U.S. Open. Only one major and one World Golf Championsh­ip remain on the schedule.

Koepka has company in that regard. British Open champion Shane Lowry spent most of his time on the European Tour late last year and into the first month of 2020, so he has only seven starts on the PGA Tour and is at No. 148. C.T. Pan, who played in the Presidents Cup, has missed seven of nine cuts since January and is No. 182.

Sergio Garcia is at No. 122. One week can change everything. Dustin Johnson, who missed the entire fall recovering from knee surgery, was off to a slow start before the pandemic and missed the cut at Colonial upon his return. Two weeks later, he won the Travelers Championsh­ip and moved up to No. 22.

Koepka still has the World Golf Championsh­ip at TPC Southwind, where he won last year, and the PGA Championsh­ip, where he tries to become the first player to win three straight times in stroke play. There is time. Plus, he’s not one to sweat such matters. BONES ON THE BAG Matt Fitzpatric­k came over from England for the restart of the PGA Tour, and caddie Billy Foster stayed behind. The idea was for Fitzpatric­k to get used to the protocols, and then Foster would join him for the World Golf Championsh­ip in Memphis, Tennessee, and the PGA Championsh­ip in San Francisco.

Fitzpatric­k used Cayce Kerr for three tournament­s. And then he got an offer he couldn’t refuse for two weeks at Muirfield Village: Jim “Bones” Mackay, the longtime looper for Phil Mickelson who now does course commentary for NBC Sports.

“I was absolutely shocked,” Fitzpatric­k said. “Everyone knows his place in the game and how well he’s done. Even just walking around here, people are excited to see him back and on tour. For me, I was very taken aback.”

It wasn’t an accident. Fitzpatric­k has an endorsemen­t with Workday, whose CEO knows Mackay and suggested he reach out to Fitzpatric­k. They will be working together the next two weeks at the Workday Charity Open and the Memorial.

LET’S PLAY TWO

Muirfield Village is hosting different PGA Tour events in consecutiv­e weeks, which hasn’t happened in 63 years.

The last time was in 1957, when Roberto de Vicenzo won the All American Open against an 83-man field at Tam O’Shanter Club in Illinois. Dick Mayer won the World Championsh­ip of Golf on the same course a week later.

That was the 10th straight season that the All American Open and World Championsh­ip of Golf were held at Tam O’Shanter in successive weeks. Lloyd Mangrum was the only player to win both events in the same year (1948).

According to the PGA Tour, there was one other tournament held on the same course in back-to-back weeks.

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