The Denver Post

Koepka: Rivalry with Bryson is good for game

- By Pete Iacobelli

RIDGELAND, S.C.» Brooks Koepka insists his ongoing rivalry with fellow major champion Bryson DeChambeau is good for golf.

Koepka is at the inaugural Palmetto Championsh­ip this week, his first event since a video interview outtake at the PGA Championsh­ip last month showed the four-time major champ rolling his eyes as DeChambeau walked behind him.

The clip was not supposed to be shown, yet it was posted on social media and picked up more than 10 million views before it was removed.

To Koepka, the video put the attention squarely on golf for a social media-savvy generation essential for the game’s growth.

“I get the traditiona­lists who don’t agree with it. I understand that, but I think to grow the game you’ve got to reach out to the younger generation,” he said Wednesday. “I don’t want to say that’s what this is, but it’s reaching out to a whole bunch of people. It’s getting golf in front of people. I think it’s good for the game.”

And it didn’t end at the PGA Championsh­ip.

After DeChambeau heard heckles of “Brooksie” at the Memorial last week and a few fans were removed from the Muirfield Village site, Koepka put up a promo video offering free beer from his sponsor to those ejected.

DeChambeau this week, like Koepka, thought a “good, jesting rivalry is good for the game of golf.”

Koepka, ranked eighth in the world, explained that he felt DeChambeau was being loud as he walked past the interview site at the Ocean Course last month.

DeChambeau, who is not playing this week, didn’t talk directly to Koepka as he strode past. “He was saying something about how he hit a perfect shot and it shouldn’t have been there,” Koepka recalled. “It was just very, very loud.”

“I just lost train of thought,” he continued, “which I think was pretty obvious.”

When asked if tour officials have talked to him about the feud, Koepka said he regularly speaks with the PGA Tour about everything happening in golf.

Expect things to heat up once more when defending U.S. Open champ DeChambeau and Koepka, who won that major in 2017 and 2018, play in this year’s event next week at Torrey Pines.

This week was supposed to be the RBC Canadian Open outside of Toronto. Instead, continuing COVID-19 concerns led officials to call off the tournament for a second straight season.

That means Rory McIlroy, who won the event in 2019, will be a three-year reigning champion when the tournament takes place in June 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States