Brooks
Koepka, injury troubles “squared away” is back - again - and hoping
some good golf will see him end a disrupted 2020 on a high note.“I’ve
got my body squared away, feels a lot better,” Koepka said in Las Vegas
Tuesday as he prepared to make his first start in almost two months at
the US PGA Tour CJ Cup at Shadow Creek.
Koepka, who started the year
ranked number one on the world but was bumped out of the top 10 this
week, has been sidelined since withdrawing from the first event of the
US tour’s playoffs, the Northern Trust, in August.
The two-time US
Open champion missed the coronavirus-postponed championship at Winged
Foot as he continued to recover from a hip injury that he says was
related to earlier knee trouble.
It was at the CJ Cup in South Korea
last year that Koepka slipped on some wet concrete and aggravated a
prior left knee injury. He was sidelined three months, and played just
two months before the pandemic brought golf and the rest of the sports
world to a halt.
In 13 starts worldwide this year the four-time major
winner has two top-10 finishes, including a tie for second at the WGC
event in Memphis.
He was in contention at the PGA Championship in San
Francisco as he sought a third straight title. But he fired a
final-round 74 and after missing the cut at the Wyndham Championship he
called a halt to focus on treating and rehabbing his hip.
“I really had no idea how bad I felt through the whole year,” Koepka said. “It’s the whole reason I played like crap.”
Koepka
said he received another round of platelet-rich plasma treatment on his
knee about three weeks ago. He also had a painkilling injection in his
hip, but was told that rest would be the real key. “It’s just all about
trying to make sure everything’s good. I spent basically the last month
out in San Diego, so I haven’t been home. I’m just doing rehab every day
and just trying to get better.”
Koepka said he had only been hitting
balls for about 10 days, but he expects no physical limitations this
week at Shadow Creek, where the CJ Cup was moved after Covid-19 concerns
prevented it from being held in Asia.
Winning the goal
Despite the uncertainties, in characteristic Koepka style he said just one thing would define a good week for him: “Winning.”
He
makes his return against a strong field that includes the top four
players in the world - Dustin Johnson, Jon Rahm, Justin Thomas and Rory
McIlroy - and 15 of the top 20.
All are looking ahead to November and
the Masters at Augusta National, and Koepka said the reshuffled
schedule gives him a chance to finish strong in a difficult year. Koepka
said he didn’t watch golf during his absence, and so didn’t see Bryson
DeChambeau bully Winged Foot into submission to claim his first major
title at the US Open.
But DeChambeau, the world number five who is
taking four weeks off to prepare for the Masters, apparently caught
Koepka’s attention with his latest plan to add even more distance to his
drives: switching to a longer 48-inch driver that he hopes to have in
play at Augusta.
While DeChambeau’s power game has critics, Koepka
isn’t among them. “He’s using one of his skills to his advantage,”
Koepka said. “He’s always had speed, but he’s pushing it to that next
level, finding the boundaries of how far he can actually hit it and play
with it and he’s done a good job of that. He’s hitting it a mile. “I
mean, the 48-inch driver, I don’t know. Is that the longest you can use?
OK, if he uses it there’s a chance he gains even more yardage. “Hey,
it’s something he’s found that’s working for him. I don’t see anything
wrong with it.”