USA TODAY US Edition

0 will be most important number for golf this week

- Steve DiMeglio

With COVID-19 testing, the PGA Tour is hoping for a clean slate at its restart in Texas

Brooks Koepka hasn’t been right for some time now.

Not since his left knee started bothering him last year and he required surgery Sept. 2 to repair a partially torn patella tendon, which he reaggravat­ed in October when he slipped on wet concrete.

Thus, one of the most imposing figures in profession­al golf with his Popeye arms, six-pack abs and barrel chest, as well as a resume just as intimidati­ng – he won three times in 2019, including his fourth major at the PGA Championsh­ip, and posted runner-up finishes in the Masters and U.S. Open – became a bit player instead of a first-page leaderboar­d occupant.

Check the results. Back in August, he was leading the FedExCup standings and ranked No. 1 in the world. Now he’s 213th in the FedExCup standings and No. 3 in the world.

His most recent top-10 result came when he finished fourth in the Tour Championsh­ip last August. He started this wraparound season with a missed cut in Las Vegas, a withdrawal in South Korea at the CJ Cup and then skipped the Presidents Cup because of his knee. He started this year with ties for 34th and 17th in a swing through the Middle East on the European Tour, then tied for 43rd in the Genesis Invitation­al, missed the cut in the Honda Classic and tied for 47th in the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al before the PGA Tour shut down three months ago.

Was Koepka reaching a boiling point? Not in the least.

He never lost his cool nor his confidence. Still, the three-month break due to the COVID-19 pandemic was a blessing for him. A new and improved Koepka – check out the fresh moustache – arrived at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, as the PGA Tour resumes play with the Charles Schwab Challenge.

“I got lucky,” Koepka said Wednesday at Colonial. “(The break) was definitely beneficial for me. I was able to kind of reassess where I was at, get the knee stronger. The knee is back. It’s a lot better. And then finally be able just to swing the club the right way and kind of get back to the process or the way of thinking that I had before. It’s been a blessing in disguise for me without a doubt.”

Koepka has never been one to sweat, has shouldered the blame and just moved forward. He thought he was on the right track at the Players Championsh­ip before the PGA Tour’s flagship event – and the Tour – was halted after the first round in March.

“It was starting to come around. I felt something positive. But right now it’s a million times better,” he said. “The swing feels like it’s in a great spot. I’m controllin­g ball flights, controllin­g spin, yardages, putting it good, chipping it good. I feel like a new person, honestly.

“The way I’m able to move right now is a lot better than I was three months ago, four months ago.”

Koepka admitted he dug himself a hole but is certain he’ll pull himself out. He’s been at Colonial since Saturday, played every day since, and will pull on good vibes from his only start in the tournament, when he shot a pair of 63s and finished second to Justin Rose in 2018. He also has experience in dealing with layoffs due to injuries, so concern is not in his yardage book.

“It feels like I’ve done this too many times over the last two years with injuries, having a couple months off, but to finally be back playing, it’s exciting, and I can’t wait to tee it up,” he said. “If I do what I’m supposed to do, I’ll be just fine. I didn’t do what I was supposed to do. It is what it is; I can’t change it. It’s in the past. But you play good, you win, everything will take care of itself.”

 ?? RAYMOND CARLIN III/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Brooks Koepka brings a new look and new outlook to the Schwab Challenge.
RAYMOND CARLIN III/USA TODAY SPORTS Brooks Koepka brings a new look and new outlook to the Schwab Challenge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States