Here's how Brooks Koepka has performed since joining LIV Golf
To say Brooks Koepka was struggling with his game when he left the PGA Tour for LIV Golf is quite an understatement.
Koepka looked completely lost on Tour. Fans knew it. He knew it.
While filming Netflix’s Full Swing he looked particularly burned out while admitting he didn’t know how to fix his game.
“I’ve had these question marks for like the last year and a half,” Koepka said “Am I going to be the same golfer? Am I ever going to be the same? And I still don’t know where I’m at. I’ll be honest with you, I can’t compete with these guys week-in and week-out.”
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Koepka finished tied for second at the 2019 Masters. He won two PGA Championships and two U.S. Opens — going back-to-back at each tournament. Now he’s ranked 118th in the world and earned his way to back Augusta via five-year honorary status for his major tournament wins.
That status will expire after 2024 and he’ll have to prove he can perform at the highest level if he wants to play at the Masters again. Based on his LIV Golf results so far, he’s got plenty of work to do. LIV events consist of just three rounds of play with no cuts.
2023
- Mayakoba: 71-72-17 — 31st place
- Tucson: 69-69-73 — 29th place
- Orlando: 65-65-68 — 1st place
2022
- Portland: 70-70-76 — 20th place
- Bedminster: 68-76-66 — 11th place
- Boston: 70-67-69 — 27th place
- Chicago: 70-74-70 — 22nd place
- Bangkok: 67-67-69 — 9th place
- Jeddah: 62-67-69 — 1st place
The 32-year-old has rather long odds as he gears up for the Masters. At BetMGM, Koepka opened +6600 to win the event for the first time in his career.
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