Brooks Koepka And Srixon/Cleveland Part Ways
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Brooks Koepka And Srixon/Cleveland Part Ways

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Brooks Koepka And Srixon/Cleveland Part Ways

Here’s one that is seemingly coming out of nowhere, but Srixon/Cleveland and Brooks Koepka have mutually agreed to part ways.

A press release from Srixon/Cleveland parent company Dunlop Sports Americas says the parting is effective immediately.

“Brooks has served as an exceptional brand ambassador for the Srixon and Cleveland Golf brands,” the announcement reads. “His commitment to competing at the highest level of the game, including a major championship victory with Srixon and Cleveland Golf equipment in play exemplified the performance standard both brands stand for.”

Koepka signed a multi-year deal with Srixon/Cleveland in late 2021. His first career event as a brand ambassador was the made-for-TV grudge match against Bryson DeChambeau a few days later in Las Vegas.

Golf – The Masters – Augusta National Golf Club, Augusta, Georgia, U.S. – April 8, 2024 Brooks Koepka of the U.S. on the 14th hole during a practice round REUTERS/Mike Blake

How it started and how it ended

Koepka was a Nike staffer right up until that company exited the golf equipment business in 2016. From that point until signing the Srixon/Cleveland deal, he was a free agent. Koepka played Mizuno irons until early 2021 when, without a contract, he switched to a set of Srixon ZX7 irons. He won the Phoenix Waste Management Open that February with those Sirxons in the bag.

During that year, Srixon developed a ball specifically for Koepka, which became the Srixon Z-STAR Diamond.

Seven months after signing the deal with Srixon/Cleveland, Koepka was among the first golfers to leave the PGA and join LIV. He had knee surgery during the 2021 season and had been battling injuries. He admitted that the nine-figure offer from LIV was too good to pass up.

“I’m gonna be honest with you, I signed for the dough,” Koepka said on the BS w/Jake Paul podcast last October. “Tomorrow I can go get in a car accident and never play golf again and my family’s taken care of.”

Koepka left LIV earlier this year under the PGA’s readmission program.

Brooks Koepka

Where does Koepka go from here?

A multi-major winner with considerable notoriety would be a nice prize for any OEM. Koepka, however, is a different sort of cat. He could sign on with McLaren (we’ve heard nothing to substantiate that, however. It’s pure speculation), or he could remain a free agent and play what he wants.

We’re not sure if there were cracks in his relationship with Srixon/Cleveland, although Koepka did notably switch from his Srixon ball to a Titleist just before The Masters.

Where he winds up, if anywhere, will be a story worth watching.

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John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

John is an aging, yet avid golfer, writer, 6-point-something handicapper enjoying life in beautiful New Hampshire. He loves telling stories, writing about golf and golf travel, and enjoys classic golf equipment. “The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.” - BenHogan

John Barba

John Barba

John Barba

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John Barba

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      mg

      2 months ago

      Perhaps Bryson can print him up a set

      Reply

      CrashTestDummy77

      2 months ago

      My tin foil hat says Callaway or just solo free agent.

      Reply

      EricMc

      2 months ago

      He clearly loved the irons, as he played them before he was under contract. However, Srixon never seemed to get either the ball or the driver to his liking. If you are Srixon, it’s hard to push the guy as the face of your product line if you can’t give him a driver or ball he wants to play. They couldn’t justify the spend and he wasn’t thrilled with the product. Maybe it was a mutual parting of the ways. Everyone just needed to move on.

      Reply

      Tim

      2 months ago

      Brooks is a weasel and is always whining about something. Who cares why he went to LIV and why he went back. Who cares that he changed clubs again. My thoughts are that he is washed up and will only decline until he turns 50 then he will maybe win a senior tour event or two.

      Reply

      Mike

      2 months ago

      I’d love to be “washed up” like him…him having multi-generational wealth. My bet is you won’t see a ton of the current PGA pros on the Champions Tour (unless perhaps for a Major). Unlike a generation ago they don’t need the $$$. But interest in the Champions Tour 10-20 years from now w/b the same as today…minimal.

      Reply

      Fake

      2 months ago

      I think guys who love the competition would still do it. I’m sure it’s still fun to win, even if it is the Cologuard Classic.

      Anthony Reikow

      2 months ago

      Nothing last forever. The only thing in life that is permanent is “change”.
      Thanks for sharing, Jman.

      Reply

      Fake

      2 months ago

      I know that Brooks is publicly not the most personable guy and not necessarily a fan favorite, but I do appreciate that he said that LIV was all about money, not some vague “growing the game” company line.

      Reply

      Tim

      2 months ago

      Agree with all your points

      Reply

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