The Norwalk Hour

Koepka could use more wins

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SOUTHAMPTO­N, N.Y. — Brooks Koepka now has as many majors as Greg Norman and as many PGA Tour victories as Pat Perez.

Koepka belongs in the conversati­on of elite players in his generation by winning his second U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills, a test that asked an entirely different set of questions than the U.S. Open he won last year at Erin Hills.

Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth are the only players in their 20s to have won multiple majors, at least for now.

And while the 28-year-old Koepka is only in his fourth full year on the PGA Tour, to see his supreme performanc­e at Shinnecock Hills makes it hard to believe he has only one other PGA Tour title. That was three years ago at the Phoenix Open.

That’s likely to change. It might have to for Koepka to get the recognitio­n he deserves, even if that’s not what drives him.

His record should get anyone’s attention.

Koepka has finished among the top 15 in nine of his past 10 majors starting with the 2015 British Open at St. Andrews. The exception was the Masters two years ago, when he tied for 21st. He missed a month with an ankle injury and returned with a tie for fourth at the 2016 PGA Championsh­ip to secure a spot on his first Ryder Cup team. And then he went 3-1 in his Ryder Cup debut at Hazeltine.

He really is a major player.

So what about all the other tournament­s he’s played?

Koepka touched on that last summer at the Bridgeston­e Invitation­al when he said the majors are where “I feel like I’m going to shine.”

“Unfortunat­ely, I haven’t done it as much in regular tour events or throughout my career,” Koepka said. “It’s just being a little bit more focused, maybe taking it more serious, knowing that every shot … to me, it feels like life or death. If you screw up, you’re gone. I just love getting up for it and playing the best and playing really, really hard golf courses.”

Shinnecock went from ridiculous­ly hard on Saturday to overly gentle on Sunday, though the ultimate measure was Koepka playing the final 36 holes in even par to win. He finished at 1-over 281, the first time in five years that no one broke par at the U.S. Open.

The USGA doesn’t like to talk about scores, but that’s the identity of this major.

And for now, majors define Koepka.

Norman gets beat up for the number of majors he could have won, including at Shinnecock Hills in 1986, the year he had the 54-hole lead at all four majors. The Shark also had 75 victories around the world and was No. 1 longer than any other player until Tiger Woods came along.

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