Brooks Koepka leaves the bluster to everyone else at LIV Golf. He cares about only his golf, especially when it’s not going the way he wants.
He was burning inside a year ago when he played not to lose in the final round of the Masters and watched his two-shot lead turn into a four-shot loss. He vowed not to let that happen again, and he delivered a month later by claiming his fifth major title at the PGA Championship.
Koepka found more motivation in failure already this year. That he was an afterthought in five LIV Golf events wasn’t nearly as irritating as being a no-show at Augusta National. He failed to break par in any round and beat only 10 players who made the cut.
He was asked in Singapore how is game was trending.
“Clearly not very good, with Augusta the way that went,” Koepka said, living up to his reputation of cutting to the chase. “I kind of felt like I wasted all the time from December until then. Just keep grinding away, keep doing the work, and hopefully something will turn around.”
Met Gala 2024: Rita Ora goes nude in a barely
Britain's Kensington Palace releases image of Prince Louis to mark his 6th birthday
Trump's 'Truth Social' applied for H
Cyberattacks are on the rise, and that includes small businesses. Here's what to know
Ancelotti keeps Lunin in goal for Madrid in 2nd leg of Champions League semifinal against Bayern
Baltimore port to open deeper channel, enabling some cargo ships to pass after bridge collapse
Minnesota State Sen. Nicole Mitchell charged with first
GoFundMe expands into Mexico as part of for
Rain cheque: The Singapore hotel that will pay YOU if there's a downpour
Britain's Kensington Palace releases image of Prince Louis to mark his 6th birthday
Vladimir Putin is sworn in for his fifth term as president at glittering ceremony in front of hand
Murder investigation launched after two people died in house fire in north