Brooks Koepka, who says it is ’embarrassing’ to be ranked 20th in the world, opens with 66 at WM Phoenix Open

There was nothing embarrassing about Brooks Koepka’s play in the opening round at TPC Scottsdale.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – Embarrassing.

That’s the word four-time major champion and former World No. 1 Brooks Koepka used to describe entering the week ranked No. 20 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

“I mean, that’s embarrassing to be 20th, I feel like,” said Koepka, who is winless since last year’s WM Phoenix Open. “A lot of it has to do with injury, man. I’ve been hurt, on the sidelines, not playing, playing through injury, you can’t compete with guys out here. It’s nice to be somewhat healthy and get out here and I mean I’m not too worried about it, it will bounce back up.”

There was nothing embarrassing about Koepka’s play in the opening round at TPC Scottsdale as he carded six birdies and a lone bogey to shoot 5-under 66, one stroke behind the early clubhouse leader K.H. Lee.

Koepka, a two-time champion in Phoenix, has missed the cut in three of his last four official PGA Tour starts and hasn’t recorded a top-10 since the British Open in July. But the WM Phoenix Open is a tournament that sounds and feels a lot like a major to Koepka and he thrives in that environment.

“He loves playing in front of people,” said Koepka’s caddie Rickie Elliot. “He loves the big crowds this tournament always gets and how the course this week is playing firm and fast.”

Leaderboard | Tee times, TV info | PGA Tour Live streaming on ESPN+

“I love when people get rowdy.” Koepka added. “They’re cheering you when you hit it tight, and they’re booing you when you hit it bad. It almost feels like a real sport, like football, basketball, things like that, soccer.

“If you do something wrong, you deserve to get heckled. If you do something right, they will cheer for you. I think that’s what makes this event so cool. I understand why some guys don’t like it. They don’t agree with, or they just don’t play it, I guess, because they don’t like it. It’s something I have always loved.”

Koepka, 31, also loves TPC Scottsdale, site of his first PGA Tour victory in 2015.

“It suits me down to the ground. I think you see a lot of guys that hit it long and fade it, play well here,” Koepka said. “It’s a bomber’s paradise. If you can put the ball in play, you can make some good scores.”

After tweaking the swing weight and lie on his driver, Koepka was “dialed in” on Thursday – his words despite hitting just 6 of 14 fairways – noting it’s one thing to find fairways at home during practice and another under the bright lights of a tournament. He did, however, spray a 3-wood at the 348-yard 17th hole ringed by water to the left and behind the green that could have been disastrous.

“Helluva drive,” Koepka cracked of his shot that sailed some 50 yards right of his target. But he drew a decent lie and liked the distance of 83 yards to the hole. He lofted a pitch to 7 feet and stole a birdie from the jaws of bogey or worse.

“I was trying to be 25 feet short and left of the hole, but it was starting to roll towards the water and it was a little too close to me,” he said. “I’ll take three, for sure.”

Korea’s K.H. Lee is a big fan of TPC Scottsdale, too. Last year, he finished runner-up to Koepka. He picked up where he left off by rolling in three birdies and an eagle on the front nine en route to posting 6-under 65. Xander Schauffele, Louis Oosthuizen and Charley Hoffman shared third place at 4-under 67.

“Just very comfortable here,” said Lee, who won the AT&T Byron Nelson last year for his lone victory on another TPC layout, at TPC Craig Ranch. “Everything better.”

But to improve upon his showing last year and hoist the trophy on Sunday, Lee may have to outduel Koepka, who seems set on making another run at the title of world No. 1.

“I mean there’s nobody out here that’s shooting to be No. 2 in the world,” Koepka said. “So if you are, you’re probably playing the wrong – shouldn’t be playing. So 19 spots to go.”

[vertical-gallery id=778247917]

[lawrence-related id=778247650,778247653,778247802,778247709]

Matthew Wolff among three WDs from next week’s British Open

Withdrawals from the oldest championship in golf continue to pile up.

Withdrawals from the oldest championship in golf continue to pile up.

The R&A announced Saturday that Matthew Wolff, K.H. Lee and Danny Lee have withdrawn from next week’s British Open.

K.H. Lee withdrew for the birth of his child. No reasons were given for the other two withdrawals.

Kevin Na, who is in contention at this week’s John Deere Classic, withdrew earlier this week, citing travel and COVID-19 restrictions at the tournament. Also, South Koreans Si Woo Kim, who is ranked 50th in the world, and Sungjae Im, who is ranked 27th, decided to pass on the 149th edition of the British Open earlier this week to concentrate their efforts on the Tokyo Summer Games later this month.

Kim was forced to stop playing after 26 holes of the John Deere Classic with a bad back.

Wolff, ranked No. 35 in the world, will be replaced by Andy Sullivan, who is 81st in the world. K.H. Lee will be replaced by Antione Rozner, ranked 84th. And Danny Lee will be replaced by Troy Merritt, who lost in a playoff in last week’s Rocket Mortgage Classic and is ranked No. 86.

The next three players on the reserve list are Harold Varner III, Brendan Steele and John Catlin.

The open will be played July 15-18 at Royal St. George’s in Sandwich, England.

[listicle id=778079535]

Winner’s Bag: K.H. Lee, AT&T Byron Nelson Championship

A complete list of the golf equipment K.H. Lee used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson Championship

[mm-video type=video id=01ew2hcwqwmswye7q1 playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01ew2hcwqwmswye7q1/01ew2hcwqwmswye7q1-652749d06cec24bb9105e7bb4b3da23b.jpg]

A complete list of the golf equipment K.H. Lee used to win the PGA Tour’s 2021 AT&T Byron Nelson Championship:

DRIVER: Callaway Epic Max LS (10.5 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD DI 6 X shaft

FAIRWAY WOOD: Titleist TS3 (15 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD GP 7 X shaft

HYBRID: Titleist TS3 (19 degrees), with Graphite Design Tour AD HY 95 X  Shaft

IRONS: Titleist U500 (4), Callaway X Forged CB (5-PW), with Project X LZ 6.5 shafts

WEDGES: Titleist Vokey Design SM7 (52, 56, 60), with True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400 shafts

PUTTER: Toulon Design San Diego

BALL: Titleist Pro V1x

GRIPS: Golf Pride Tour Velvet (full swing) / Traxion PistolGT 1.0 (putter)

K.H. Lee weathers storm, wins AT&T Byron Nelson, earns spot in PGA Championship

K.H. Lee earned first PGA Tour title and did it just in time to earn a spot in the second major of 2021.

MCKINNEY, Texas — For those on the cusp of their first PGA Tour title, it’s easy to get a little damp in the palms.

Mother Nature enhanced this scenario on Sunday for K.H. Lee.

With some of his round played in an utter downpour, the South Korean who has slowly but surely climbed up the rankings finally had his day in the sun — scratch that — winner’s circle. Despite a lengthy weather delay, Lee finished the event at 25 under, topping the field at the AT&T Byron Nelson at TPC Craig Ranch by three strokes.

Sam Burns, who led after 54 holes, was alone in second while Scott Stallings, Daniel Berger, Charl Schwartzel and Patton Kizzire were all third at 21 under.

The conditions didn’t make it easy for Lee. With rain streaming from the sky and significant puddles on the fairways, his drive on the 16th hole measured just 223 yards, despite being well struck. To put that in perspective, the driving average on the same hole in Thursday’s opening round was 292.4 yards.

[vertical-gallery id=778104065]

Soon after, thunder and lightning forced a delay and Lee was forced to think about a potentially life-changing victory a little longer for roughly two hours.

Coming out of the delay, Lee missed a short putt and made bogey — just his third of the week — and playing partner Sam Burns seemed to have new life with a few holes to play.

But Lee followed by sticking a shot to inside 4 feet on the par-3 No. 17 and stuck the putt go get his lead back to three and take any pressure off the final hole.

The long trek to victory started with Lee moving to the United States in 2016 to play on the then-Web.com Tour (now the Korn Ferry Tour), and finally becoming a full-time member of the PGA Tour in 2019.

The Seoul native’s best previous finish was earlier this year when he finished T-2 at the Waste Management Phoenix Open, just behind Brooks Koepka.

Lee, who had been listed as the third alternate for next week’s PGA Championship, got into the event with the victory and is the final entrant in the field. He also gained full exemption for Tour events through the 2022-23 seasons and jumped to 29th in the FedEx Cup standings.

Lee had a little inside knowledge of the course, which was enjoying its first year as the host site of the Byron Nelson. His caddie, Brett Waldman, played at TPC Craig Ranch back in 2010 during PGA Tournament qualifying.

Meanwhile, one who got off the course before the rains came was Kizzire, who bounced back from a 71 on Saturday to posted 10 birdies on Sunday en route to a 63. The former Auburn star said he eased up prior to the final round.

“(On Saturday) I felt like I put a little too much pressure on myself, and today the pressure was kind of off and I felt like I put my head down and went out there to make birdies,” he said. “We had the same wind we’ve had the last few days and it wasn’t raining yet, so I just got out there and started giving myself opportunities. I’ve been putting really well, so I did that, I putted great today.”

Bryson DeChambeau, the FedEx Cup points leader, shot an unspectacular 72-69 after reaching the weekend and finished T-55 at 10 under.

[lawrence-related id=778104519,778103950,778104522,778104500]