The Day

Stress of a major didn’t faze Koepka

- By DOUG FERGUSON AP Golf Writer

Farmingdal­e, N.Y. — Brooks Koepka should know as well as anyone that nothing in golf comes easily.

His well-documented journey to the PGA Tour took him to remote outposts like Kenya and Kazakhstan. Even after Koepka won a second straight U.S. Open last summer, which no one had done in 29 years, it didn't seem enough to be the first name mentioned among the next generation of stars.

So he spent three days setting records at Bethpage Black in the PGA Championsh­ip — the first player to shoot 63 in consecutiv­e years in the majors, the lowest 36-hole score in major championsh­ip history and a seven-shot lead, the largest ever for 54 holes in the PGA Championsh­ip.

And then he endured the toughest day of his career Sunday, which turned into the most rewarding.

"I'm glad I've got this thing sitting next to me," Koepka said as he looked at the shiny Wanamaker Trophy. "It's very satisfying, this one. This is definitely the most satisfying of all the ones I've won."

Moments earlier, after he turned a potential meltdown into the kind of clutch play that has defined his career, Koepka draped his muscular arms around the top of the trophy and let out a deep sigh from stress and satisfacti­on, and then he smiled.

Koepka said at the start of the week that majors are sometimes the easiest to win. This one should have been. It wasn't.

His seven-shot lead was down to one with four holes to play and the No. 1 player in the world — Dustin Johnson, his best friend in golf — was piecing together the best round of a final day in 25 mph gusts that made Bethpage Black as fearsome as ever.

Koepka answered with all the right shots. Johnson faded with two bogeys. Koepka closed with a 4-over 74, the highest final round by a PGA champion in 15 years, and he didn't care how it looked.

His place in history was secure. He joined Tiger Woods as the only players to win back-to-back in the PGA Championsh­ip since it switched to stroke play in 1958. He became the only player to hold back-to-back titles in two majors at the same time.

Four years ago, he had one PGA Tour title in his first full season as a full member. Now he has four majors out of the last eight he has played, a stretch not seen since Woods won seven out of 11 after capturing the 2002 U.S. Open at Bethpage Black.

In the end, there were no style points, only the trophy. But that trophy spoke volumes. Even louder was the gallery, and it wasn't always pretty. Koepka had a six-shot lead when he walked off the 11th fairway. When he walked up to the green on the par-3 14th, with his ball over the green and Koepka headed for a fourth straight bogey, the chants jarred him. They weren't for him. "DJ! DJ! DJ!" the cheers rained down for Johnson, who was on his way to another birdie up ahead on the 15th hole to pull within one shot. Koepka says he was more shocked than he was nervous, but he heard them.

"It's New York. What do you expect when you're half-choking it away," he said. "I think I kind of deserved it. I've been to sporting events in New York. I know how it goes. I think it actually helped. It was at a perfect time because I was just thinking: 'OK, I've got everybody against me. Let's go.'"

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP PHOTO ?? Brooks Koepka holds up the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championsh­ip on Sunday at Bethpage Black in Farmingdal­e, N.Y.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP PHOTO Brooks Koepka holds up the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championsh­ip on Sunday at Bethpage Black in Farmingdal­e, N.Y.

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