Photos: 2023 LIV Golf Team Championship at Trump National Doral in Miami

Here’s a look at some of the best photos from the 2023 LIV Golf Team Championship. 

It’s time for the LIV Golf season finale.

Event No. 14 is here for LIV in its second season, as the circuit moves to Trump National Doral in Miami for its team championship.

The format will look similar to last year’s event: a little bit of match play, a little bit of stroke play with a whole lot of money on the line.

Teams have been earning points all season based on their finishes: the winning team goes home with 32 points, while Nos. 9-12 in the weekly standings leave empty-handed. After LIV’s final regular-season event in Jeddah last week, teams were seeded based on their position in the final standings.

The three-day shotgun start event features a $50 million purse as well as a mix of singles and foursomes matches in the quarterfinal and semifinal rounds on Friday and Saturday, with stroke play for Sunday’s final round.

Here’s a look at some of the best photos from the 2023 LIV Golf Team Championship.

Brooks Koepka’s comments about LIV Golf teammate Matthew Wolff show the door is officially shut

Koepka has not sugarcoated his feelings about Wolff, who, like Koepka, lives in Jupiter. And he dug in again Wednesday.

MIAMI — For those who believed there was any chance of Brooks Koepka and Matthew Wolff salvaging their relationship, Koepka’s comments Wednesday ahead of LIV Golf’s season-ending team championship slammed that door shut.

Forever.

Koepka has not sugarcoated his feelings about Wolff, who, like Koepka, lives in Jupiter. And he dug in again Wednesday. Now Wolff, who remains a part of Koepka’s LIV team, is paired with Brooks’ brother, Chase, in Friday’s foursomes event.

“We don’t have much interaction, no,” Brooks said.

When pushed, he elaborated.

“I’ve tried. I’ve spent the majority of the beginning of the year trying to help and trying to figure that out. But I think it’s past its point. I’ve tried. I’ve been very open with it. Sometimes you can’t help people that don’t want help.”

Smash, the team Koepka captains, includes his brother, Wolff and Jason Kokrak.

In July, Koepka questioned Wolff’s work ethic and attitude, saying he has a lot of talent but that “talent’s wasted.” This was after Wolff withdrew from the LIV event outside of Washington, D.C.

Last week, during the LIV event at Jeddah, which Koepka won, he was asked about his team and said, “there’s only three of us on our team,” and talked about how much he enjoys being around Chase and Kokrak.

Now, Brooks Koepka likely will be looking for two new team members for the 2024 season. Chase Koepka was 48th in the individual points standings and will be relegated. His only path back to LIV is through a full-field promotion event that will be held in December.

Brooks was third in the final individual standings, Kokrak 23rd and Wolff 27th.

Wolff was approached by Golfweek on Wednesday following Koepka’s comments but did not stop, shaking his head before a question was asked. But in a recent interview with The Palm Beach Post, before both the Jeddah and Doral events (and the Ryder Cup) Wolff said the Koepka controversy was behind him. He added he believed Koepka deserved his spot on the Ryder Cup team.

Matthew Wolff open about mental health

Wolff, 24, has been open about his mental health struggles, saying at one time it was difficult just getting out of bed and that he feared going to tournaments. He said did not want to “screw up in front of everyone.”

This was early 2021.

“Golf is just really hard,” Wolff told The Post last month. “Growing up it came really easy to me, the competition was easier. In a professional setting, it’s hard in front of everyone with all that pressure knowing you’re not going to play well every single time.

“It’s something that I struggled with a little bit coming from college and junior golf where you won everything you entered pretty much, and transitioning into (professional golf.) These guys are the best in the world and even if you play decent you might get whacked. It’s more of a rollercoaster and handling that is something I’m certain to learn and grow into a little bit.”

Despite the harsh, and insensitive, comments from Brooks, Wolff still believes LIV’s team format has eliminated some of that pressure he felt playing in isolation on the PGA Tour.

Brooks Koepka of Smash GC speaks to the media after the first round of LIV Golf Jeddah at the Royal Greens Golf & Country Club on Friday, October 13, 2023, in King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia. (Photo by Montana Pritchard/LIV Golf)

“Pro golf is a lonely place,” Wolff said. “You don’t really feel like you have many people, at least I didn’t feel like that before. When I made that jump to LIV, I felt like there were a lot more people looking out for me and had my back.

“Just kind of gives me a little bit of weight off your shoulders and you have a team to lean on and go to, guys I care about a little bit more. It’s been pretty nice as well.”

All of which makes Koepka’s comments even more coldhearted. Wolff might deserve some blame for this relationship souring, but anything that has happened off the course, during team meetings, does not warrant Koepka’s public comments about a teammate who has had personal struggles.

Brooks Koepka vs. Phil Mickelson in Friday’s quarterfinals

Regardless of where Smash finishes in the team championship — Koepka’s team faces HyFlyers, captained by Phil Mickelson, in Friday’s quarterfinals on the Blue Monster with Koepka and Mickelson going head-to-head in match play — Koepka already has secured a solid season over all platforms.

Koepka captured his fifth career major at the PGA Championship, was runner-up at the Masters and was the only LIV golfer to play in the Ryder Cup. His victory at Jeddah was his second on the LIV tour this season along with three other top 5 finishes.

Koepka, who recently became a dad for the first time, has won $17.5 million in prize money from LIV, including a $4 million bonus for placing third in the individual standings. His PGA Tour earnings for the four majors was just more than $5 million.

His most lucrative years previous were 2019 and 2022, when he earned just more than $9.5 million.

“I definitely feel like I’m back to my old self,” he said after winning Jeddah.

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Brooks Koepka vs. Phil Mickelson highlights 2023 LIV Golf Team Championship quarterfinal matches at Trump Doral

Eight teams will be in action on Friday, with four teams on a bye until Saturday’s semifinals.

DORAL, Fla. — After 13 events spread from Mexico to Saudi Arabia, the final event of the 2023 LIV Golf League season is here.

What sets the LIV Golf Team Championship, held once again at Trump National Doral, apart from the other big-money, no-cut events on the upstart circuit’s schedule is its unique format. Throughout the year, teams earn points for their finishes at each regular-season event. At the $50 million finale, teams are seeded based on their points earned over the season and then compete in both stroke and match play over three days. The top four teams have a bye for the first round, which is the quarterfinals.

The captains play the captains in a singles match, leaving three players to be split between another singles match and a foursomes (alternate shot) match. No ties. The first team to two points wins and advances to Saturday. Simple enough? (You can read more about the format here).

An interesting wrinkle is that the higher-seeded teams get to pick their opponents in the quarters and semis, which sets the table for a little trash talk as seen during Tuesday’s press conference which featured the captains of teams Nos. 5-12.

Up first was Louis Oosthuizen, captain of Stinger GC, who selected Kevin Na’s Iron Heads, the team that’s been comfortably in dead last all season long. Su-Ann Heng, a member of the LIV broadcast team and moderator of the captain selections, tried to get Oosthuizen to bring the heat with his reason for picking the Iron Heads, saying, “You don’t have to be kind. You can have a little fun.”

The soft-spoken South African said he “didn’t really want to play any of the other teams” before apologizing to Na, who claimed his team had “the better southern African” in Scott Vincent. Zing! Next up, Fireballs GC captain Sergio Garcia, who picked the three-way captained Majesticks (Ian Poulter, Henrik Stenson and Lee Westwood).

“I guess they just want to have a Saturday off,” quipped Stenson.

Cam Smith and Ripper GC selecting Martin Kaymer’s Cleeks GC was a rather dull exchange, leaving Brooks Koepka and Smash GC to square off against Phil Mickelson and his HyFlyers GC.

“I didn’t really get much option in this,” said Koepka to a room full of laughter. “Yeah, so we’re playing, or I’m stuck with Phil, and the rest of the guys are playing with the other guys. It will be a good matchup.”

Mickelson was complimentary of Koepka’s year as the PGA champion and a two-time winner with LIV before adding, “There’s a lot of other guys I would rather be playing against. So I’ve got my work cut out for me.”

Here are the first-round matches for Friday’s quarterfinal round.

Fireballs GC vs. Majesticks GC

  • Singles: Sergio Garcia vs. Henrik Stenson
  • Singles: Eugenio Chacarra vs. Sam Horsfield
  • Foursomes: Abraham Ancer/Carlos Ortiz vs. Ian Poulter/Lee Westwood

Smash GC vs. HyFlyers GC

  • Singles: Brooks Koepka vs. Phil Mickelson
  • Singles: Jason Kokrak vs. Cameron Tringale
  • Foursomes: Chase Koepka/Matthew Wolff vs. James Piot/Brendan Steele

Stinger GC vs. Iron Heads GC

  • Singles: Louis Oosthuizen vs. Kevin Na
  • Singles: Branden Grace vs. Scott Vincent
  • Foursomes: Dean Burmester/Charl Schwartzel vs. Sihwan Kim/Danny Lee

Ripper GC vs. Cleeks GC

  • Singles: Cam Smith vs. Martin Kaymer
  • Singles: Marc Leishman vs. Richard Bland
  • Foursomes: Matt Jones/Jediah Morgan vs. Graeme McDowell/Bernd Wiesberger

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