I Think Brooks Koepka Might Be Washed
News

I Think Brooks Koepka Might Be Washed

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

I Think Brooks Koepka Might Be Washed

I take no joy in writing this because I actually like watching Brooks Koepka play golf.

While everyone has crowed over media darlings like Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth over the past decade, it was Koepka who dominated the major championship landscape. From 2017 to 2023, he won five times and had nine top-10 major finishes on top of that.

Koepka was golf’s bully, a player who was able to raise his game at precisely the right moment. No one could match his ability to turn on the switch at majors. He would dither around the PGA Tour, rarely contending, only to show up at majors like a top player in the world who had been in prime form for months.

He showed up with swag and would stomp on dreams, winning like he expected it to happen. It was almost emotionless, save for a chip on his shoulder and an “I’m better than you” vibe.

Koepka displayed the kind of personality that didn’t endear him much to the masses—but it won him a lot of important golf tournaments. Only 14 men in the game’s history have more major titles.

But I’m afraid we might have already seen the last of that guy.

I’m starting to think Brooks Koepka is washed.

The results are matching the body language

From a pure drought perspective, it hasn’t been that long since Koepka proved he can be a major championship menace.

He lost to Jon Rahm in the 2023 Masters but backed it up with a quintessential Koepka victory at the PGA Championship. That was only two years ago.

It feels like much longer than that, however. Koepka has faded from view considerably, having gone seven consecutive major starts without even sniffing contention.

And after an opening 4-over 75 in the first round of this week’s PGA Championship at Quail Hollow, it’s once again doubtful he will be a factor.

We’re talking about someone who, for the most part, went seven years where we all felt compelled to mention his name first in pre-major discussions. He usually validated that belief in him. The lone exception was in 2022 as his game cratered but everyone acknowledged that was due to a knee injury. He couldn’t even bend down to read putts.

When Koepka went to LIV in May of that injury-riddled year, many speculated he was taking the money as an insurance policy, cashing in on his success and riding off into the sunset.

In early 2023, the first season of Netflix’s Full Swing painted a grim outlook for Koepka. He not only looked lost physically as a golfer but he sounded defeated mentally.

“I’ll be honest with you, I can’t compete with these guys, week in, week out,” Koepka said during that episode.

But there was still life in his career. A healthy Koepka climbed the mountaintop again for a brief flurry in 2023, appearing to rejoin the game’s biggest forces after what seemed to be a slight injury-induced blip.

Now I’m wondering if that comeback was more an aberration than anything.

Similar to Tiger returning to form in 2018 and 2019 to prove he could do it, did Koepka give us one last hurrah in 2023?

Koepka is often compared to Dustin Johnson, another top player who fled for LIV. But Koepka, 35, is five years younger. And his desire for winning—that ability to lock in at majors—outpaced Johnson by a wide margin.

Johnson took the LIV money and basically retired. Good for him. Do whatever you want. His career didn’t have that much more sunlight left so it was easier to stomach.

But the prospect of Koepka taking that same route is much more disappointing. He could have reached Arnold Palmer or Tom Watson levels of legend. He could have undeniably been considered a top 10 golfer ever—and I don’t think top five was off the table.

Maybe he still does that. Maybe there is still fight left in him.

To be clear, I am rooting hard for that to happen.

But, right now, Koepka seems unfocused

At the moment, we’re looking at the No. 59 player in the world. And that accounts for all tournament golf played anywhere.

Guys who are ahead of him on that list include Harry Hall, Sam Stevens and Ben Griffin.

No disrespect to those guys but we’re talking about Brooks Koepka here. Has he really fallen that far?

Even comparing Koepka just to LIV players, he is No. 12 among that group. There are only 50 guys! And many of them wouldn’t even be able to keep a Tour card, let alone be top players.

On Thursday at Quail Hollow, Koepka had none of his normal intensity.

His day could be summed up by his tee shot at No. 3. With his ball still in the air—it was a massive slice heading for the trees—Koepka was already asking for a provisional.

His body language is saying that he’s checked out.

This is his No. 1 event. He’s never missed the cut at the PGA. Everything is set up perfectly for him.

And he opens 5-over through 12 holes?

Is it injury? It doesn’t look like it. Is it apathy? You wouldn’t think a competitor of his stature would be that apathetic in such short order.

Would an eventual switch back to the Tour change things? I don’t think it would hurt. That ability to turn things on at a moment’s notice might be easier if he was playing more serious golf on a week-to-week basis (if he even wants that).

All I can say right now is that golf was better with the threat of Koepka taking everyone’s lunch money. Maybe you rooted against him or maybe you wanted to see him play the spoiler—either way, I’m guessing he made you more invested in majors.

We are missing that guy now. As I’m staring at a major leaderboard that looks more like the 3M Open than the PGA Championship, it sure would be nice if Koepka rekindled what made him so great.

There’s a growing chance he won’t—and that makes me sad.

For You

For You

Instruction
Jun 22, 2025
Beginner Golf Checklist: 7 Must-Know Basics For New Golfers
J.J. Spaun Viewership J.J. Spaun Viewership
News
Jun 21, 2025
J.J. Spaun Made The Putt Of His Life—But His Performance Didn’t Bring In Viewers
LIV PGA TOUR U.S. OPEN LIV PGA TOUR U.S. OPEN
LIV Golf
Jun 21, 2025
LIV Versus PGA Tour At The U.S. Open: Who Showed Up At Oakmont?
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 8 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife and dog (of course the dog's name is Hogan).

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      The Swami

      1 month ago

      35 years old and cashing checks on LIV. it couldn’t be more obvious he wants off there to get back to PGA Tour. will he be allowed to at any price and/or what options will he have when his LIV contract is up? remains to be seen.
      he’s definitely lost interest and focus playing hit and giggle conditions on LIV for 3 rounds once a month.

      but washed? nice clickbait stupidity. refer to this dumb article when he ever gets back on PGA tour.

      Reply

      Chris

      1 month ago

      Get a life.
      Nobody cares what 8 handicap house husbands think beta

      Reply

      Chris G

      1 month ago

      100% correct!!!!

      Reply

      Rob McCance

      1 month ago

      He’s gonna kick ur ass Sean.

      Reply

      wallaby129

      1 month ago

      Dang same thoughts on this websites articles! At least your crew puts its heart and soul into shoe reviews

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 month ago

      Oh, the other thing about this week:
      EVERYBODY knows this, they have ALL talked about it, all the commentators, all the pundits –
      the course sets up perfectly for guys who hit the ball RIGHT TO LEFT –
      Brooks hits his ball left to right. That’s his preferred ball flight.
      Sometimes it’s just horses for courses, and this week ain’t his course

      Reply

      Ryan

      1 month ago

      Scottie scheffler hits the ball left to right my boy

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 month ago

      He’s made somewhere in the region of $150million via his contract to play on LIV in the 4 years he’s been there, including his 5 individual wins there on LIV and team wins.
      He’s got a family now with a baby. He’s a career “veteran” if you want to call it that –
      if we made an analogous comparison of his type in other sports – NBA, MLB, NFL, blah blah – pick a player of his type – he’s done a LOT more than many in those other sports, such as pitchers who are good but never won a ring, may be a basketball dude who won 1 ring and made twice as much as what Brooks has done in the 4 years, or a prospect in the NFL who also would be making twice as much as Brooks in the same 4 years, and the NFL only plays 17 games or whatever, that prospect may have never got to the playoffs !!

      Washed? Nah. He’s doing just fine. One of these days he’ll win a couple more majors. He’s got a lot going on that he has to handle, as mentioned , his team his wife and baby, lots and lots of travel across the planet with LIV. As Paul McGinley pointed out the same thing on GolfChannel the other day, the travelling extensive distance around the world between various countries and cultures, shifting time zones and having jet lag, moving around every other week, compared to the American tour players who stay in the same country most of the time, it does take some getting used to.
      He’ll be alright

      Reply

      OpMan

      1 month ago

      Here’s an example:
      https://www.spotrac.com/mlb/player/_/id/310/justin-verlander
      Dunno why people treat achievements in golf differently, golf careers are longer, individual achievements seem to be more lauded when it comes to golf. It’s ludicrous how people don’t compare it to other “careers” in trophies won versus money made. Verlander has only won twice. Where does he rank amongst the greatest pitchers? Is that how it’s compared?
      So then why do golfers get nitpicked across their career averages/achievements – so many players like Billy Casper and Cary Middlecoff who were stalwarts and tremendous players in their own right during their best years never get lauded or mentioned, ever, not in the special top echelons of what a tremendous golf career is supposed to be among the greats, supposedly. During their day, nobody criticised them across the media like we do with our current players. But those players won a LOT, still. Look at Casper and Middlecoff’s wins, they are incredible.
      Is that where Brooks will be? Second-ranked listed among the golf’s greatest list?

      Reply

      Fake

      1 month ago

      “Every good drama needs heroes and villains.” He was always someone to watch, that’s for sure.

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Instruction
    Jun 22, 2025
    Beginner Golf Checklist: 7 Must-Know Basics For New Golfers
    J.J. Spaun Viewership J.J. Spaun Viewership
    News
    Jun 21, 2025
    J.J. Spaun Made The Putt Of His Life—But His Performance Didn’t Bring In Viewers
    LIV PGA TOUR U.S. OPEN LIV PGA TOUR U.S. OPEN
    LIV Golf
    Jun 21, 2025
    LIV Versus PGA Tour At The U.S. Open: Who Showed Up At Oakmont?