Brooks Koepka ‘had a blast’ during holiday round with President Donald Trump

Brooks Koepka detailed a holiday round of golf with his father, brother Chase and President of the United States Donald Trump.

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It’s no secret President Donald Trump loves to play golf.

President Trump awarded Tiger Woods the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, and has teed it up with Woods, as well as Jack Nicklaus, Dustin Johnson, PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and Augusta National chairman Fred Ridley, Lexi Thompson and many, many others.

Add former World No. 1 and current No. 3 Brooks Koepka to that list.

In a profile in GQ, Koepka opened up about his love for golf, what he would change about the sport and his relationship – or lack thereof – with other players. He also talked about a recent round with President Trump.

Koepka, his father, younger brother Chase and President Trump “had a blast” at Trump’s course in West Palm Beach.

“It was nice to have my family there, my dad, my brother. Anytime it’s with a president, it’s pretty cool,” said Koepka. “I don’t care what your political beliefs are, it’s the President of the United States. It’s an honor that he even wanted to play with me.”

“I respect the office, I don’t care who it is,” added Koepka. “Still probably the most powerful man in the entire world. It’s a respect thing.”

In fact, Koepka has met four of the five living U.S. presidents, including President Barack Obama at Floridian Golf Club in Palm City, Florida.

“I don’t care what anybody says — that was the coolest thing,” said Koepka. “Not to get into politics — like, I don’t agree with everything that Obama did during his presidency — but to this day, I think that it was the coolest thing ever. Top five highlights of my life so far, that was one of them. Meeting him as a sitting U.S. president.”

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Misunderstood? Brooks Koepka details what he would change about golf, a sport he truly loves

Don’t let his candid criticism fool you, Brooks Koepka loves golf. He proved it with an in-depth profile in GQ.

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Ask Brooks Koepka a question and he’ll answer. It might not be the answer you expect or necessarily want to hear, but it’ll be honest.

The former World No. 1 – who now sits third behind Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm – opened up in great detail in a profile in GQ about what he would change about the game of golf, a sport that he truly loves despite some outside perception.

“One thing I’d change is maybe the stuffiness,” said Koepka, who’s never viewed himself as just a golfer. “Golf has always had this persona of the triple-pleated khaki pants, the button-up shirt, very country club atmosphere, where it doesn’t always have to be that way. That’s part of the problem.”

He continued:

“Everybody always says, ‘You need to grow the game.’ Well, why do you need to be so buttoned-up? ‘You have to take your hat off when you get in here.’ ‘You’re not allowed in here unless you’re a member — or unless the member’s here.’ Really? I just never really liked the country club atmosphere. I know that drives a lot of people away from liking me. But just ’cause this golf club has such prestige and the members are all famous and have a lot of money. … like, why can’t I show up and just go play the golf course? Why do I have to sit in my car and wait for the member?”

Koepka then used hockey as an example. Players have issues. Then they fight. Then they go to the penalty box, cool off, and continue playing. It’s celebrated in hockey.

“Golf’s just held to a different standard,” added Koepka. “Because it’s supposed to be a gentleman’s sport. And that’s where I think they lose a lot of people. They just do.”

Koepka has previously called golf boring, saying, “If I could do it over again, I’d play baseball, 100 percent, no doubt.” But don’t let his candid criticism and outspoken nature – when asked – fool you. The 29-year-old winner of four major championships, seven PGA Tour and six European Tour tournaments, loves golf.

“I just think people confuse all this for me not loving the game. I love the game. I absolutely love the game,” said Koepka. “I don’t love the stuffy atmosphere that comes along with it. That, to me, isn’t enjoyable.”

When he practices, Koepka looks just like the weekend hacker: Shirt untucked, tennis shoes untied, no belt. That doesn’t fly at most golf clubs.

“But a lot of clubs, if I walked up like that, it’d be: ‘Sir, you need to tuck your shirt in. You need to take your hat off when you get in here.’ That’s just not my style of place. I’m not saying no rules is the answer. But it’s like, you want everyone to enjoy themselves when they’re there, you don’t want to feel like you’re walking on eggshells when you arrive at the golf course. I don’t like feeling like I’m walking on eggshells everywhere I go.”

Besides winning, what does the former Florida State Seminole enjoy about golf? Learning.

“I like the fact that I learn something every time I play,” he explained. “You can go mess around and find some new shot. No matter what you do, you’re never going to have the same shot again. … And I always think that that’s just so cool.”

“I love it,” he added, “but I know how to break away from it. That’s where the confusion lies. Or maybe the misconception of me lies. I absolutely love the game. If I didn’t love it, I’d retire right now. Don’t take me wrong, but I could go off and nobody would ever see me again and I could live a great life. I do it because I actually love golf. I love going to practice, to compete, to tournaments, grinding it out even when you don’t have your best, trying to figure out a way to get it done — that’s fun to me. But the one thing that I’ve been very good at is breaking away from the game when I need to.”

What’s one way he breaks away from the game? By not befriending those he competes with on Tour.

“This might come across the wrong way but I already have enough friends. I don’t need any more,” said Koepka of his relationship with other players. “Just ’cause we work together doesn’t mean we have to be friends. I’ve got enough friends.”

“I just don’t want to be that close with everybody I compete with,” Koepka said. “Like, I don’t even have Rory’s phone number. I didn’t have Tiger’s phone number for the longest time. Like, I just never saved it. … I’ll text guys after they win, you know, but I’m still competitive. I still get mad — I mean, I’m happy for them, but I’m still like, Man, that should’ve been me. Or: That could’ve been me. You know, you still just lost.”

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Brooks Koepka talks Tiger Woods, Patrick Reed and his own Olympic prospects

A PGA Championship media event in San Francisco included a Brooks Koepka Sirius/XM radio interview in which he talked Tiger Woods and more.

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Brooks Koepka’s 2020 debut on the PGA Tour at last week’s Genesis Invitational ended with a different kind of victory lap. Koepka finished T-43 at Riviera Country Club, but his status as the two-time defending PGA Championship winner resulted in a Monday media tour around the San Francisco Bay Area. TPC Harding Park will host this year’s championship May 14-17.

Koepka’s day included, among other things, a public transit ride with the Wanamaker Trophy in tow. He also addressed media in a press conference. His take on tournament venue Harding Park?

“It’s a big boy golf course,” Koepka said. “You have to be able to hit it long. It’s very difficult. It’s a major championship golf course. You know that. You look at – this finish will be interesting. I think it will be a great finish. You look at the back nine there, starting on about 13, 14, it gets really interesting. You’re going to see a lot of – it will be exciting, especially if it’s close on Sunday. I think those holes let up for quite a few disasters and some good golf.

He also sat down for a town hall broadcast at the SiriusXM/Pandora studios in Oakland, California. Koepka, who has not been shy to offer his opinion as his career has taken off, discussed everything from his prospects of playing in the Olympics to his conversation with Tiger Woods after Woods’ Masters win last year to his thoughts on Patrick Reed’s rule infraction at the Hero World Challenge.

Here are the highlights.

Keeping score with Tiger Woods

Koepka acknowledged what an interesting feeling it is to go head-to-head with Woods down the stretch at a major championship. He has done it twice, holding off Woods at the 2018 PGA Championship but losing to him at the 2019 Masters.

Interestingly, Koepka revealed that Woods took the opportunity to rib him in the immediate aftermath of his Masters victory.

“It was crazy walking off the green and being there to congratulate him,” he said. “The first thing he said was, ‘One-and-one now.’”

Patrick Reed’s infamous sand shot

Host Sway Calloway asked Koepka a pointed question when it came to Patrick Reed’s movement in a waste bunker at the Hero World Challenge that ultimately resulted in two penalty strokes for improving his line of play.

“What are your thoughts on that? Was he cheating?” Calloway asked.

“Uh, yeah.  I think, yeah, yeah,” Koepka said. “I mean, I don’t know what he was doing, building sand castles in the sand but, you know, you know where your club is.  I mean, I took three months off and I can promise you I know if I touched sand.  It’s one of those things where you know, if you look at the video obviously he grazes the sand twice and then he still chops down on it.  I guess the Astros are going through that right now.  Jim Crane said it, when he got asked, ‘Is it cheating?’  And he said, ‘No, we just broke the rules.’ … If you play the game you understand the rules.  You understand the integrity that goes on.  I mean, there’s no room for it…”

An Olympic future?

When golf made its return at the 2016 Olympics, Koepka was not among the men representing the United States. Where does he fall on wanting to add “Olympian” to his resume? As it turns out, he doesn’t feel particularly strongly one way or another – in fact, he’s 50-50, as he said. As the 29-year-old Koepka pointed out, professional golf aspirations and Olympic aspirations only recently began to overlap.

“I think it would be cool to be an Olympian but at the same time it’s not something I’ve grown up wanting to be. … Golf is so new [to the Olympics] it’s one of those things where I never had aspirations of playing in the Olympics.  So now all of a sudden it is in there and it throws kind of a wrench in the schedule.”

There are majors to consider plus the playoffs and the Tour Championship (plus the load of cash that goes to the FedEx Cup winner). On that subject, Koepka acknowledged, “I’d like $15 mil. I think that’d be nice. I’d like to be fresh for that.”

All that said, Koepka called it an honor to play for your country. If anything, he said, he’s leaning toward going.

Honoring Kobe Bryant

Koepka never met Kobe Bryant before his Jan. 26 death. As it turns out, Koepka was already working on a Kobe-themed sneaker design last fall with his partners at Nike.

“I’ve always said, I kind of missed the Jordan era. LeBron (James) was kind of coming up when I was 15. My big thing was I was a Shaq and Kobe guy, I was a big Lakers fan,” he said.

When Koepka knew he was going to be in Los Angeles for the Genesis Invitational, he and his Nike team decided it would be the right time to debut the shoes. Koepka considered Bryant one of the men who made him who he is as a player, and wanted to honor that.

“I never met the guy but I was crying in my hotel room,” he said of the night he found out about Bryant’s death. “The impact he had on me – I look at it through the injuries, idolized him when I was a kid, all these different things.”

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Most money earned in a single PGA Tour season

A top 10 list of most money won in a single PGA Tour season by a single player.

There can be a lot of money won playing tournament golf, especially on the PGA Tour in the last couple of decades.

Prize money has exploded over the last several years on the circuit thanks in large part to the presence of Tiger Woods.

Here’s a look at the top 10 for most money earned in on-course winnings by a player in a single PGA Tour season, not counting bonus money:

10. Jason Day, 2014-15

$9,403,330

Day got his long-awaited first major championship at Whistling Straits, where he won the 2015 PGA Championship. His record 20-under there beat Jordan Spieth by three strokes, ending Spieth’s hope for a Grand Slam in the process. He would end up winning four of his last six starts and five events overall, finishing third place in the FedEx Cup standings.

Brooks Koepka brings Wanamaker Trophy on San Francisco public transit ride

Brooks Koepka, two-time defending PGA champion, hopped on public transit on Monday and brought the Wanamaker Trophy with him.

Major-champion status does not make Brooks Koepka too good for public transit.

Koepka, the two-time defending PGA Championship winner, hopped on the train in San Francisco Monday and brought the Wanamaker Trophy along with him. It made for a stares and a great photo op.

It’s not every day you hop on the BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) and sit next to a professional golfer of Koepka’s status – and the hardware to prove it, no less.

Koepka, who finished off a tie for 43rd at the Genesis Invitational on Sunday, made his way north to the San Francisco Bay area early this week.

TPC Harding Park in San Francisco will host the 2020 PGA Championship May 14-17.

Koepka, who lost the World No. 1 spot to Rory McIlroy ahead of the Genesis Invitational (but remains No. 2), met with members of the media Monday as well as local athletes and celebrities.

The Genesis was Koepka’s first PGA Tour start in 2020. He is not in the field for this week’s WGC-Mexico Championship.

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Rory McIlroy on history with Brooks Koepka, a trash-talking text and rivalries in golf

Rory McIlroy opens up on his relationship and history with Brooks Koepka while also rejecting the notion of rivalries in golf.

The finale to Rory McIlroy’s three-part feature in the Irish Independent was released on Sunday morning, and they saved the best for last.

The four-time major champion sat down with journalist Paul Kimmage at McIlroy’s home in Holywood, Northern Ireland, where “no question was off limits.”

Previous topics included McIlroy opening up about his personal life, his disappointing performance at last year’s British Open in Northern Ireland at Royal Portrush, and his new mental approach to golf and blocking out outside opinions.

The most-recent topics: Brooks Koepka and the Olympics.

Check out the highlights, with the full interview here.

Resetting after Portrush

McIlroy wrote 10 pages in his journal on the flight from the British Open back to Florida. From his journal:

“Sunday, July 21. So, major season over . . . Disappointed with my play considering how I played some of the regular tournaments . . . Definitely in my comfort zone at regular stops, need to create a similar feeling at the majors . . . Tried to treat every tournament the same this year, while it worked in some ways it didn’t help in others . . . I need to play as if there is no consequence . . . Eleven events remaining this year . . . Probably 18 to 20 before next year’s Masters . . . Set daily goals . . . Bring some more intensity . . . Win the FedEx Cup . . . Still in a great position heading into the play-offs . . . Improve my world ranking to 10-plus points . . . Keep reading . . . juggling . . . blah, blah, blah . . . Better diet – got lazy, not disciplined.”

McIlroy said his missed cut in his home country was seeing “the worst that can happen – falling flat on your face in front of your home people.”

He had been too tentative and careful, trying not to fail instead of succeed. “So that was the mindset: ‘I’m going to be aggressive. I’m going to go for things. I’m going to play my way.’”

Brooks and Rory: Memphis

At the 2019 WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational, McIlroy was one shot clear of Koepka entering Sunday’s final round.

“So, I go out in the final round and my mindset was . . . It’s another round of golf . . . a great opportunity . . . I’m going to try to play well. And I was beaten on the day,” McIlroy remembered. “Obviously, Brooks played great and shot 65 but I think, more than anything, I was beaten by his intensity and his desire. I was too relaxed.”

Later on in the season, McIlroy learned of a text Koepka sent to his friends before the final round in Memphis: “I’m going to crush him.”

“Yeah, and f*** he sort of did,” said McIlroy. “Well, Brooks and I have always got on great – we do get on great – but he was obviously taking that mindset, ‘It’s me and him’. And I guess it was a good thing that he thinks highly of me, or not highly of me, if he was saying he was going to crush me.”

McIlroy wasn’t angry, he took it as a compliment that he was viewed as a threat by the then-world No. 1, adding “you’re never going to make it personal but there was a little, ‘Okay, if that’s the way you want to do it then I’ll play that game too.’”

Rory and Brooks, FedEx Cup Playoffs

McIlroy and Koepka were then paired together for the first two rounds of the the 2019 Northern Trust, with McIlroy beating Koepka by six shots in those two rounds. The text had nothing to do with his performance and didn’t change a thing for McIlroy.

“Why should it? Why would anything change? Because he told his friends, ‘I’m going to go out and destroy him.’ That’s just his competitive nature, so I don’t . . . maybe I’m too soft. It doesn’t matter to me,” McIlroy explained. “I learnt pretty early on in this career that you don’t take anything personal. And if you don’t take anything personal, you make your life a lot easier.”

McIlroy finished sixth at the Northern Trust and 19th at the BMW Championship. Koepka finished T-30 and 24th, respectively. The two were then off to Atlanta for the Tour Championship with $15 million, and bragging rights, on the line.

McIlroy was one shot off the lead going into the final round, playing with Koepka. His mantra that day came from a passage in a book about Alabama football coach Nick Saban: Focus on the process not the prize.

“I didn’t give a shit about the money. I swear to God, because I’d done it before, I’d earned it, and these boys hadn’t,” said McIlroy. “So they were thinking about it but I wasn’t. I was thinking about the year before with Tiger. I was thinking about the books I’ve read. It really wasn’t anything to do with the money for me, it was proving something to myself, and overcoming.”

McIlroy and Koepka didn’t talk much that day – he learned that lesson the previous year after losing to Tiger Woods in the final pairing on Sunday.

“I’m still saying, ‘good shot’ and doing all the things you would expect in a round of golf, but I didn’t engage with him, and he didn’t engage with me, and that’s what it needed to be,” said McIlroy. “And that’s what it needed to be in Memphis, but I’d learned.”

The best story McIlroy had that day was from the seventh hole. In 2018 he hit driver into the hazard and made double-bogey. What happened in 2019?

“Brooks takes a driver, pulls it left, loses a ball and makes double. I take a three-wood and make birdie, and go from one shot behind to two ahead,” recalled McIlroy. “I swung with so much freedom – especially after seeing what he’d done – and it was a big moment. It was actually the moment because it was a validation of everything I’d been working on.

“Atlanta was rewarding because of the final round in Memphis, and the fact that I’d made the FedEx Cup my goal when the Majors were done in Portrush,” said McIlroy. “It was massive for my career and for my confidence. I had gone out with the No. 1 player in the world and taken him down.”

Is there a Brooks-Rory rivalry?

To simply state McIlroy’s thoughts: Nope. And if that’s what you want, you’re watching the wrong sport.

“It happens in tennis . . . Federer, Djokovic, Rafa . . . they play each other so many times and that’s how rivalries are created. But the way the game of golf is structured doesn’t lend itself to that,” explained McIlroy, noting that Jack Nicklaus vs. Tom Watson and Nick Faldo vs. Greg Norman weren’t rivalries, but duels.

“Nicklaus and Watson in ’77, Norman and Faldo in ’96 – but one or two battles isn’t enough to call it a rivalry. I mean, you’ve put those names together but how many times did they go up against each other in a final round? It might happen in one of every 10 events.”

Rory roasts a media member

Kimmage highlighted this from a story written by Golf Magazine’s Alan Shipnuck on McIlroy downplaying the rivalry with Koepka: “I was deeply disappointed by Rory’s response. This was no time to be classy and diplomatic. Brooks challenged his manhood and McIlroy retreated.”

McIlroy, who called out Shipnuck at the final press conference of the 2018 Ryder Cup, responded by calling him a “gossip writer.”

“Seriously, what do you expect? ‘This was no time to be diplomatic and classy?’ When is there not a time to be diplomatic and classy?” asked McIlroy. “But I guess that’s just my thing. When they go low, you go high.”

The Olympics

McIlroy caught considerable shade from the media and fans when he didn’t participate in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. He plans to play this summer in Japan, noting “an Olympic Games in Japan is a lot more appealing to me than the Olympic Games in Brazil. It’s a golfing nation. There’s a golfing culture. The atmosphere will be great.”

He then told a story of a text exchange with gold-medal winner Justin Rose, whom he congratulated after the event.

“I sent Justin Rose a text after he won, I think I still have the message: ‘I’m happy for you, mate. I saw how much it means to you. Congratulations.’ He said: ‘Thanks very much. All the boys here want to know do you feel like you missed out?’ I said: ‘Justin, if I had been on the podium (listening) to the Irish national anthem as that flag went up, or the British national anthem as that flag went up, I would have felt uncomfortable either way.’ I don’t know the words to either anthem; I don’t feel a connection to either flag; I don’t want it to be about flags; I’ve tried to stay away from that.”

For McIlroy, playing in the Olympics won’t be about national pride and patriotism. It’ll be about the experience.

“I’m going because I want to have a great experience. And that might sound selfish but that’s how I feel. I’m not going to be jumping around in a tricolour, I’m going to stay as neutral as possible because that’s the house, and place, I grew up in, and it’s always who I’ve been,” said McIlroy, who sees himself as a citizen of the world. “I’ve made my home in America; I grew up in Northern Ireland; I play for Ireland . . . it’s a complicated dynamic. And again, that might come across as flip-flopping, or soft, but I don’t give a shit.”

McIlroy’s favorite moment

Despite missing the cut, McIlroy picked Friday at last year’s Open as the moment of the year. He shot a 6-under 65 and missed the cut by one shot, but was praised by the his countrymen and patrons at Royal Portrush. McIlroy was widely regarded as the player of the decade, so, what was his moment of the decade?

“It was probably getting married. Of everything I’ve done in the last 10 years, that’s been the best,” answered McIlroy. “If it’s just golf, I’ll say winning the Open because I had my mum there (the only major she’s seen him win). So those two things, it all comes back to the females in my life. Yeah, jeeze, we got married in Ashford Castle and had such a good time. It was the best weekend ever. I even let Sergio wear his green jacket.”

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Lynch: Matt Kuchar, once cast as a villain, tries to rewrite latest L.A. story

Kuchar is the early leader at Genesis, but stars such as Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka are lurking in the wings.

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PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. — L.A. is the perfect town for sports. It’s a place where every script gets rewritten, where a horror story can morph into a fairytale, where last year’s villain can be this week’s hero. And that’s the movie Matt Kuchar is hoping to see.

Kuchar shot a 7-under-par 64 in the opening round of the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club to take the lead over a chasing pack that included both leading men (Rory McIlroy, Tiger Woods) and bit-part players (Russell Henley, Wyndham Clark). Kuchar’s score bettered last year’s first round by four strokes, but that wasn’t the only way in which things improved for the nine-time PGA Tour winner.

A year ago Kuchar arrived at Riviera at the center of the kind of public relations nightmare that would make hardened Hollywood spin doctors cringe. For more than a month, his once pristine ‘golly gee’ reputation had been spit-roasted on social media after it emerged he paid a temporary Mexican caddie a fraction of what his regular bagman would have earned for his victory at the Mayakoba Classic several months earlier.

GENESIS: Podcast | Tee times, TV info | Scores | Photos

Even casual sports fans who don’t understand golf do understand cheap, and Kuchar was loudly heckled at several tournaments, including the ’19 Genesis. “Go low, Kuch!,” one wag shouted at him during the first round. “Just not on the gratuity.” By day’s end, Kuchar apologized and said he’d pay the stiffed caddie an extra $50,000. He went on to finish T-28, earning $50,320, which barely covered gas money spent idling in L.A. traffic after the caddie fee was deducted.

But this is a town where stars are quickly forgiven for mistreating the help, and it was polite applause rather than heckles that greeted a more cheerful Kuchar this year. “It’s a place that I absolutely love coming every year,” he said afterward.

His pursuers include McIlroy, who was playing his first round as world No. 1 in almost five years. The Northern Irishman’s opening 68 included as many eagles as bogeys (a brace of each) and he predicted things will only get tougher as the week goes on. “The afternoon tomorrow is going to play a lot different than how it played this morning, it’s going to be dry again and the course is going to firm up,” he said. “It’s going to keep getting trickier and you’re going to have to really think your way around this place. I’m looking forward to that.”

McIlroy is facing challengers who could depose him from the top spot in the rankings with solid performances at Riviera. Brooks Koepka, the man McIlroy ousted on Monday, can return the favor. Koepka shot 69 to keep himself in the mix. Jon Rahm, the fiery Spaniard who can also become No. 1 this week was among the later starters and also playing well.

A victory for tournament host Tiger Woods would give him a record-breaking 83rd win on the PGA Tour, but it would be his first at the venue where he debuted as a 16-year-old amateur in 1992. There is no other event on Tour that Woods has played as often without a win. The Masters champion was among the later starters but announced himself early with an eagle at the opening hole. By the time Kuchar was slipping off his spikes in the locker room, a surging Woods was within three shots of his lead.

Golf is not an ensemble sport. There is room for just one principal player on Sunday night, no matter how many stars are jostling for the part. But for one day at least, last year’s villain could bask in being this week’s hero. “To shoot a number like this, you kind of do most things well,” Kuchar said earnestly. “I didn’t find myself in much trouble today.”

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Equipment changes made by golf’s biggest names in 2020

Stars like Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson and Rickie Fowler have made gear changes. See what they’re using now.

January is gone and February is flying by, so most professional golfers have played a few events in 2020. Many of the game’s elite players have made changes to their equipment. If history is a guide, driver changes tend to be the easiest for most pros to make, and the most permanent, while putter changes can be short-lived.

Here are a few of the equipment changes made by golf’s best players that we have spotted so far this season.

Rory McIlroy
Rory McIlroy (Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

Rory McIlroy made his 2020 PGA Tour debut at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines and arrived with a new 10.5-degree TaylorMade SIM driver and 15-degree SIM Max fairway wood.

Fantasy golf power rankings for the Genesis Invitational

Sportsbookwire ranks the top fantasy golf options for the 2020 Genesis Invitational.

Riviera Country Club hosts the PGA Tour’s best event of the season thus far in this week’s Genesis Invitational. Eight of the top-10 golfers from the Official World Golf Ranking are part of the 120-man field. Meanwhile, seven of the top-10 golfers in the Golfweek/Sagarin rankings are in the tournament.

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Below, we rank the best fantasy golf options for the 2020 Genesis Invitational.

Fantasy Golf Top 30

Rory McIlroy during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines – South Course. (Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports)

Here are my top-30 fantasy golf rankings for the 2020 Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club.

30. Marc Leishman

The Farmers Insurance Open champion has had mixed results over his last five appearances at Riviera CC, with three missed cuts and two top-5 results. He has been erratic with the driver of late and won’t have much room for error here.

29. Jordan Spieth

Typically reliant on his putter, Spieth gained 7.8 strokes from tee-to-green at last week’s AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am en route to a ninth-place finish. He’ll need to stay in control of his driver.

28. Jason Kokrak

Still looking for his first PGA Tour victory, Kokrak was a co-runner-up here in 2016, and he hasn’t missed the cut in any of his last five appearances. He’s coming off a week of rest, as he returns to one of his favorite courses.

27. Joaquin Niemann

Niemann opened the 2019-20 season with a victory at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier. His only top-10 result since was a T-5 at the 30-man Sentry Tournament of Champions, but the expert ball striker is a strong fit for his second attempt at Riviera.

Matthew Fitzpatrick during the third round of the 2019 FedEx St. Jude Classic at TPC Southwind. (Christopher Hanewinckel – USA TODAY Sports)

26. Matthew Fitzpatrick

Fitzpatrick will play on the PGA Tour for the second week in a row after a T-60 finish at Pebble Beach. The five-time winner on the European Tour makes his debut at this event.

25. Kevin Na

Na was a co-runner-up in 2018 following a T-4 in 2017. He tied for 14th last week for his best finish since winning the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. He’s one of the best in the field in Strokes Gained: Around the Green.

24. J.B. Holmes

The defending champ has ramped up his play coming into the week with three straight top-20 finishes. He has been excellent off the tee and with the driver, and he has been starting strong before fading over the weekend.

23. Sungjae Im

Im missed the cut in his debut at this event last year, but he won the Korean Tour’s Genesis Championship in mid-October for his third pro victory.

22. Abraham Ancer

The little-known 29th-ranked golfer in the OWGR is coming off a T-6 finish at the Saudi International following his runner-up result at The American Express. He finished T-44 here last year and T-68 in 2018.

21. Matt Kuchar

Kuchar isn’t a great course fit as a shorter hitter, but he’s strong around the greens and on par 4s. His best result at this event in the last five years was a T-8 in 2016.

Phil Mickelson during the final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am at Pebble Beach Golf Links. (Kyle Terada – USA TODAY Sports)

20. Phil Mickelson

Lefty made a great run at defending his title at Pebble Beach, before ultimately falling behind eventual winner Nick Taylor. He won this event back-to-back in 2008 and 2009, and more recently finished T-6 in 2018. This will be his fifth event in the last five weeks.

19. Patrick Reed

Reed makes his first appearance here since a T-59 result in 2017. He’s one of the best on Tour around the greens, but he’ll need to improve off the tee this week.

18. Collin Morikawa

The star sophomore will compete in one of the strongest fields of his pro career. He enters the week ranked 53rd by the OWGR. He just needs to be average around the greens and with his putter in order to compete.

17. Paul Casey

Casey was a co-runner-up in 2015, but while he made the cut each of the last four years, he hasn’t finished better than last year’s T-25. He can score low at these longer venues and there are eagle opportunities on this course.

16. Jason Day

Day finished T-64 in his only trip to Riviera in the last five years (2017). He finished fourth last week and seemed to recapture his expert play around the greens.

Bryson DeChambeau during the third round of the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports)

15. Bryson DeChambeau

DeChambeau tied for 15th last year for his best result in three appearances. He finished just 52nd at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, but he excelled off the tee, and it will shine through much more at Riviera.

14. Sergio Garcia

Sergio tied for sixth at the Saudi International and will participate in a PGA Tour event for the first time since the WGC-HSBC Champions. He ranks eighth in the field in Strokes Gained: Ball Striking over everyone’s last 50 rounds on courses measuring 7,200 to 7,400 yards, per my stat model at Fantasy National.

13. Tony Finau

Finau has the ability to overpower the long par 4s (450-500 yards), which are a common theme at Riviera. He’ll need to overcome another Sunday collapse at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

12. Hideki Matsuyama

Matsuyama tied for ninth last year after skipping the 2018 event following a missed cut in 2017. He was previously T-4 in 2015 and T-11 in 2016 and clearly a fan of the course.

11. Xander Schauffele

Schauffele debuted with a T-9 result in 2018 and followed it up with a T-15 last year. He missed the cut at the Farmers Insurance Open but bounced back with a T-16 at the Waste Management Open before taking last week off.


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10. Justin Rose

Rose enters the week 10th in the OWGR after a missed cut at the Farmers. He skipped this event the last two years following a T-4 in 2017 and T-16 in 2016.

Tiger Woods during the final round of the 2020 Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines- South Course. (Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports)

9. Tiger Woods

Tiger will take his second try at his record-breaking 83rd career PGA Tour victory. He hasn’t done particularly well at this event since back-to-back runner-up finishes in 1998 (at Valencia Country Club) and 1999, but he can score low and is in top form with his irons.

8. Bubba Watson

Watson has three wins here since 2014. He’s coming off a T-3 in Phoenix following his T-6 at the Farmers to open his 2020 season. He has the driving distance, and he has been putting very well through those two events.

7. Adam Scott

Scott has gained more strokes per round at Riviera than all but two others in this field among those with at least 10 rounds played, according to Data Golf. He’ll tee it up for the first time since his win at the Australian PGA Championship.

6. Patrick Cantlay

Cantlay tied for fourth in his debut at Riviera in 2018 and followed it up with a T-15 last year. He’s one of the top ball strikers in the field and he excels on the long par 4s.

Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka at the 2020 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club. (Butch Dill – USA TODAY Sports)

5. Brooks Koepka

Koepka will participate in his first event ranked something other than first in the OWGR since the 2019 PGA Championship, after he gave way to Rory McIlroy Monday morning. He missed the cut in his lone appearance here over the last five years (2015), but he certainly has the motivation this time around.

4. Dustin Johnson

Johnson won this event by five strokes at 17-under par in 2017. He has two other top 5s, another top 10 and a T-16 in his other four visits to Riviera in the last five years. No one in the field has averaged more strokes gained per round at this venue.

3. Rory McIlroy

McIlroy, the new World No. 1, ranks second to Johnson in strokes gained at Riviera over his 12 rounds played. He tied for fourth last year after finishing T-20 in 2018 and 2016.

2. Jon Rahm

Rahm hasn’t missed the cut in a PGA Tour event since last year’s Charles Schwab Challenge, and he hasn’t finished worse than T-13 in that time, either. He has been as steady as they come, and he shines in these fields.

1. Justin Thomas

Thomas gave this tournament away to Holmes last year with a Sunday round of 75 in poor weather. He has finished in the top 10 each of the last two years and has already won twice in the 2019-20 season.

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Genesis Invitational odds, predictions, picks and PGA Tour best bets

Brooks Koepka is no longer world No. 1 but he is plenty motivated at this week’s Genesis Invitational at Riviera.

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The 2020 Genesis Invitational hosts a field of 120 golfers this week in Pacific Palisades, California. Eight of the top-10 golfers from the Official World Golf Ranking are among them, making this the top PGA Tour event of the season thus far. Below, we’ll analyze the golf betting odds, while making our picks to win the 2020 Genesis Invitational.

The key stats for the 7,322-yard, par-71 Riviera Country Club are:

  • Strokes Gained: Ball Striking
  • Strokes Gained: Around the Green
  • Birdies Gained
  • Par 4 Scoring: 450-500 Yards
  • Driving Distance Gained

My model at Fantasy National looks at the most recent 50 rounds on courses between 7,200 and 7,400 yards.

Genesis Invitational – Tier 1

Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka hug after the final round of the 2019 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club. (Photo Credit: Butch Dill – USA TODAY Sports)

Odds provided by BetMGM; access USA TODAY Sports’ betting odds for a full list. Lines last updated Monday at 9 p.m. ET.

Brooks Koepka (+2000)

There isn’t likely to be anyone in the field this week more motivated than Koepka, who gave up the No. 1 spot in the OWGR to Rory McIlroy on Monday morning. With the bump in the rankings, Koepka’s outright odds to win a tournament plummeted. By contrast, Koepka is +900 to win the Masters, +1000 to win the British Open, +800 for the U.S. Open and +800 for the PGA Championship.

While he missed the cut in 2017 (his only appearance in the last five years), this is nearly a major-caliber field. Koepka remains second in the OWGR, but he’s seventh by the odds this week.


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Adam Scott (+3000)

Scott ranks third in this field in Strokes Gained at Riviera among those with a minimum of 10 rounds played on the course. Ranked 14th in the world, he’s coming off a win at the Australian PGA Championship in late December and is well rested. He looks to become the third Aussie to win on the PGA Tour in 2020 behind Marc Leishman and Cameron Smith.

Genesis Invitational – Tier 2

Collin Morikawa watches his shot from the fifth tee during the second round of the Farmers Insurance Open golf tournament at Torrey Pines Municipal Golf Course – South Course. (Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports)

Collin Morikawa (+4500)

Morikawa has never participated in this event, but he offers adequate value after routinely being priced among the favorites in the weaker early-season events. He still hasn’t missed a cut as a professional, and he ranks 18th by the overall stat model as a great ball striker.

Kevin Na (+6600)

Na tied for 33rd last year following a co-runner-up finish in 2018 and a T-4 in 2017. He rebounded from a missed cut at the Waste Management Phoenix Open to tie for 14th last week at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. He’s one of the best in the elite field in SG: Around the Green.


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Genesis Invitational – Longshots

Francesco Molinari and caddie Mark Fulcher look on from the fourth tee box during the first round of The American Express golf tournament at La Quinta Country Club. (Orlando Ramirez – USA TODAY Sports)

Jason Kokrak (+10000)

Though he lacks the winning pedigree of many of those in the field, Kokrak has done well at Riviera. He has made the cut each of the last five years and was a co-runner-up in 2016. He ranks sixth in the field in total strokes gained over those five appearances.

Francesco Molinari (+12500)

Yes, this is the same Francesco Molinari as the 2018 Open Champion. He enters the week ranked 24th by the OWGR, but he was inside the top 10 as recently as September. He’s coming off missed cuts at the Farmers Insurance Open and the American Express, but these odds are laughable for one of the best iron players in the world.

Complete odds

Player Odds
Rory McIlroy +700
Jon Rahm +850
Justin Thomas +850
Dustin Johnson +1400
Tiger Woods +1600
Patrick Cantlay +1800
Brooks Koepka +2000
Xander Schauffele +2000
Bubba Watson +2200
Hideki Matsuyama +2500
Tony Finau +2500
Adam Scott +3000
Jason Day +3300
Justin Rose +4000
Marc Leishman +4000
Patrick Reed +4000
Phil Mickelson +4000
Bryson DeChambeau +4500
Collin Morikawa +4500
Matt Kuchar +4500
Paul Casey +4500
Jordan Spieth +5000
Sergio Garcia +5500
Abraham Ancer +6000
Sungjae Im +6000
J.B. Holmes +6600
Kevin Na +6600
Matthew Fitzpatrick +6600
Alex Noren +8000
Branden Grace +8000
Cameron Smith +8000
Max Homa +8000
Nick Taylor +8000
Charles Howell III +9000
Joaquin Niemann +9000
Ryan Moore +9000
Scottie Scheffler +9000
Adam Hadwin +10000
Brendon Todd +10000
Brian Harman +10000
Cameron Champ +10000
Chez Reavie +10000
Corey Conners +10000
Erik Van Rooyen +10000
Jason Kokrak +10000
Keegan Bradley +10000
Rafa Cabrera-Bello +10000
Ryan Palmer +10000
Scott Piercy +10000
Bud Cauley +12500
Carlos Ortiz +12500
Danny Willett +12500
Francesco Molinari +12500
Lanto Griffin +12500
Matthew Wolff +12500
Russell Knox +12500
Vaughn Taylor +12500
Andrew Putnam +15000
Charley Hoffman +15000
Emiliano Grillo +15000
Jhonattan Vegas +15000
Jim Furyk +15000
Matt Jones +15000
Patrick Rodgers +15000
Joel Dahmen +17500
Luke List +17500
Rory Sabbatini +17500
Wyndham Clark +17500
Aaron Baddeley +20000
Aaron Wise +20000
Andrew Landry +20000
Cameron Tringale +20000
Denny McCarthy +20000
Dylan Frittelli +20000
Harold Varner III +20000
Kevin Chappell +20000
Kevin Tway +20000
Martin Laird +20000
Nate Lashley +20000
Nick Watney +20000
Pat Perez +20000
Scott Stallings +20000
Sebastián Muñoz +20000
Sung Kang +20000
Adam Long +22500
Danny Lee +22500
James Hahn +22500
Talor Gooch +22500
Adam Schenk +25000
Jimmy Walker +25000
Kyle Stanley +25000
Matt Every +25000
Sam Ryder +25000
Troy Merritt +25000
Brian Gay +30000
Chris Stuard +30000
Bronson Burgoon +30000
J.J. Spaun +30000
Jason Dufner +30000
Joseph Bramlett +30000
Kiradech Aphibarnrat +30000
Michael Thompson +30000
Peter Malnati +30000
Russell Henley +30000
Sam Burns +30000
Sepp Straka +30000
Steve Stricker +30000
C.T. Pan +40000
Kyongjun Moon +40000
Kyoung-Hoon Lee +40000
Scott Brown +40000
Si Woo Kim +40000
Chris Stroud +50000
Jim Herman +50000
Roger Sloan +50000
Ryan Armour +50000
Tyler Duncan +50000
Martin Trainer +100000

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