Lynch: As the Brooks Koepka-Bryson DeChambeau beef returns to its birthplace, it’s time to let it die

The PGA Tour returns this week to the birthplace of its most engaging tussle in recent memory.

The PGA Tour returns this week to the birthplace of its most engaging tussle in recent memory, even if the most attentive fan would struggle to recall a single shot ever struck at Liberty National Golf Club.

On the morning of the final round of the Northern Trust two years ago—August 11, 2019 — I was standing by the practice putting green with Ricky Elliott and Claude Harmon III, respectively the caddie and (now former) coach of Brooks Koepka, when a clearly vexed Bryson DeChambeau approached and instructed Elliott to tell his boss to make any comments about slow play “to my face.”

The irony of directing such a request to an intermediary was lost on DeChambeau. Upon being told of the message, Koepka went over to speak with his flat-capped rival. After the round, both insisted that online onlookers should disperse.

“No issues,” Brooks said.

“He’s got respect for me, I have respect for him. So no issues,” Bryson echoed.

(“We’re going to be playing on a lot of teams together, I hope, so we go into these team competitions wanting to do our absolute best and not have anything else happen,” he added. Cue eye-roll from Steve Stricker.)

Asked recently about the ongoing feud, Koepka traced it to that day at Liberty National, claiming the two agreed not to chide each other publicly. Then DeChambeau made a sassy comment about Koepka’s abs (or lack thereof). Bets off, beef on. Thus we find ourselves in the midst of a bro brouhaha that is alternately amusing and unsettling.

Last week, Shane Ryan detailed in Golf Digest the abuse DeChambeau endured from the gallery while contending at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational in Memphis. The ‘Brooksie’ gibes were obviously bothersome, though DeChambeau did deliver the most wounding retort of the entire feud when a chump inquired where ‘Brooksie’ was: “He finished about four or five hours ago.”

The scenes Ryan described made for uncomfortable reading, but they are not uncommon in sport, nor even in golf, no matter how much we’d like to pretend otherwise. And while it’s apparent that DeChambeau is the target of a harassment campaign by some spectators, it’s less obvious to what extent blame for that can be ascribed to Koepka.

Bryson DeChambeau is seen as he practices teeing off at the driving range during the practice round of the Northern Trust at Liberty National Golf Course in Jersey City on 08/06/19.

When DeChambeau had hecklers ejected from the Memorial Tournament for calling him “Brooksie,” Koepka responded by offering them free beer as compensation for having their day cut short—a borderline unprofessional stunt that incentivized oafs to imitate the taunting. But chronology matters here: the heckling begat the overreaction which begat the beer stunt.

Some observers characterize Koepka’s actions toward DeChambeau as bullying, an accusation that has become so commonplace as to be cheapened. It’s a stretch claim. Koepka’s poking is nothing to applaud, but it falls somewhere between jock trash-talking and juvenile social media trolling. To whatever extent bullying is a concern, it owes to the behavior of those outside the ropes.

Unlike shooters on the free-throw line or pitchers on the mound, golfers don’t have a wall of white noise to help drown jeers. If a spectator wants to be heard at a golf tournament, they will be, and that fraternity — it’s always a frat — has been a tedious presence on Tour for decades. Jack Nicklaus’s dethroning of Arnold Palmer was met with ‘Fat Jack’ barbs until his winning silenced them. But loudmouthed fans can be corrosive. Colin Montgomerie couldn’t ignore them, which only inspired more, and that might explain why the best European of his generation never won a major or a PGA Tour event.

A spectator who gets his jollies needling DeChambeau is invariably the kind of swaggering blowhard whose gait after a couple of beers resembles a knackered mule attempting dressage on ice skates. But imbecility isn’t cause for ejection, unless their comments are deliberately timed to impact the execution of a shot. The PGA Tour can’t start removing spectators simply for calling one player by another’s nickname.

Brooks Koepka
Brooks Koepka plays his shot from the 17th tee during the first round of the Palmetto Championship at Congaree on June 10, 2021 in Ridgeland, South Carolina. Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images

Players who actively seek to fire up the fans — as DeChambeau did earlier this year at Bay Hill, posing arms aloft as he bludgeoned a driver over the lake toward a distant green — need to accept those fired-up fans might not always be on their side, especially a player prone to public displays of petulance like DeChambeau. Yet being a sometimes unsympathetic figure doesn’t mean DeChambeau is undeserving of support against the confederacy of dunces hassling him.

This adolescent spat has far outlived its entertainment value, though probably not just yet for Europe’s Ryder Cup team. Three things should happen to defuse a situation that is growing increasingly ugly.

First: Koepka needs to stop jabbing and understand that hecklers use his antipathy to justify the unsporting harassment of a fellow professional. Second: DeChambeau has to quit the whiny overreactions in difficult situations and learn to ignore feeble taunts from the peanut gallery. Third: the PGA Tour must group them together Thursday and Friday, thereby lowering the temperature for the inevitable day when they play their way into a weekend pairing with considerably more at stake.

Two years after it began, three parties are contributing to this spectacle, none of whom are eager to acknowledge their responsibility. All three have a role in ending it.

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Golf course owner halts bid to expand into wildlife area at Liberty State Park — for now

The Florida billionaire who wants to extend his luxury Jersey City golf course into Liberty State Park says he is halting that effort.

The Florida billionaire who wants to extend his luxury Jersey City golf course into Liberty State Park says he is halting that effort, just two weeks after New Jersey’s three-month budget legislation offered him a chance to revive the controversial plan.

Paul Fireman, the former Reebok executive and owner of Liberty National Golf Course, said in a statement Wednesday morning that he is pulling the plug on the expansion plan so the park’s advocates can address what he called the “social justice problems connected to Liberty State Park.” Fireman allies have alleged recently that the park’s keepers have not done enough to make it accessible to the largely Black neighborhoods that sit just outside of the 1,200-acre urban oasis.

It’s not clear Fireman’s plan was going anywhere. A spokeswoman for Gov. Phil Murphy said the administration does not intend to solicit a bid for the park, which is overseen by the state Department of Environmental Protection.

Fireman had made an aggressive push in recent weeks to win the support of Jersey City’s Black elected officials and to promote his argument that Liberty State Park is not run with the interests of the Black community in mind. His charitable foundation gave donations to several politically connected nonprofits, sources told NorthJersey.com, including one run by a Jersey City assemblywoman and another headed by a Hudson County freeholder. A Fireman spokesman did not respond to questions about his foundation’s recent donations.

The golf course expansion would have targeted a 22-acre peninsula on Liberty State Park’s southern end, a wildlife refuge and beach that is adjacent to Liberty National. Fireman wanted to move three of the golf course’s holes to that spot, known as the park’s Caven Point section, saying he would transform the area into “beautiful green space.” His critics have noted that moving some of the golf course there would provide dramatic backdrops of Lower Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty during televised tournaments.

Fireman first attempted to lease the parkland in 2018, but the Murphy administration turned him down in the face of opposition led in part by Sam Pesin, who runs the Friends of Liberty State Park conservancy group. Pesin’s father, Morris, is credited with the park’s creation in 1976.

“All supporters of a free park behind Lady Liberty will be very glad to read about Fireman giving up for now,” Pesin said in a statement. Fireman’s comments, Pesin said, continue “to push his self-serving false narrative about LSP. His only goal has been to privatize and destroy the LSP Caven Point natural area to relocate golf holes right by the bay for millionaires.”

Fireman’s Wednesday statement targets Pesin directly. Pesin for decades has organized opposition to most commercial development inside the park, most recently organizing opposition to Fireman’s golf course expansion and a separate plan for a marina inside the park. The park, which includes 600 acres of land and 600 acres of water on the Hudson River, should be a largely passive recreational space, Pesin has argued.

“Sam has done nothing to implement the grand vision for Liberty State Park,” Fireman said. “Pesin has reinforced a do-nothing policy and shut out minority communities from the decision-making process.”

Fireman’s recent charitable donations include $10,000 for Jersey City Assemblywoman Angela McKnight’s social services nonprofit, Angela Cares, and an unspecified amount for Team Walker, run by Hudson County Freeholder Jerry Walker. Both are popular figures in Jersey City’s Black community. Walker did not return a request for comment. McKnight said Fireman’s gift was one of many donations Angela Cares has received since the coronavirus outbreak began. She said she did not solicit it.

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Fireman, who Forbes says has a fortune that exceeds $1 billion, has been known to drop donations when he needs favors.

In 2015, he wanted the state to approve casino expansion outside of Atlantic City so he could build a casino in Jersey City. Then-Gov. Chris Christie, who had previously expressed opposition to the change, first said in 2014 that he would be open to changing his mind, then said in May 2015 that expanding casino gambling would be good for New Jersey. That month, Fireman donated $5,000 to Leadership Matters for America, which supported Christie’s presidential campaign. One month later, Fireman’s Winecup Gamble Ranch dropped $1 million into the coffers of America Leads, another super PAC supporting Christie. Fireman and his wife, Phyllis, gave a total of $5,200 to Christie’s campaign that September.

The casino never happened, though not because Christie didn’t try. Lawmakers asked voters for their approval in November 2016 and the public overwhelmingly voted against casino expansion.

“Gov. Christie and Paul Fireman have a long-standing friendship and his donation to the super PAC supporting Gov. Christie in 2016 had nothing to do with gaming in any way,” said Christie spokesperson Megan Fielder.

The Firemans did not donate money to any New Jersey politicians in 2017 or 2018, but started contributing again in late 2019. Paul Fireman gave $10,000 to the New Jersey State Democratic Committee that September and in October and November the couple gave a total of $36,400 to various candidates, with nearly three quarters going to Middlesex County Democrats.

A woman runs along a trail at Liberty State Park as the cherry blossoms bloom on Thursday, April 2, 2020, in Jersey City. Middlesex County is the home of Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin, a Democrat who decides what bills to put up for a vote in that chamber. In 2019, the state Legislature was mulling the Liberty State Park Protection Act, which would have banned anyone from developing the Caven Point section of the park. In January 2020, the bill passed the senate 21-13. But Coughlin did not post the bill for a vote in the Assembly before the legislative session ended, which means it must go through committee again before another vote.

Asked at the time if there was a relation between the Firemans’ donations and the bill stalling in the Legislature, assembly spokesman Kevin McArdle called the question “offensive.”

Dustin Johnson hits his approach shot to the 18th green during the second round of The Northern Trust golf tournament at Liberty National Golf Course. (Mark Konezny-USA TODAY Sports)

“Legislation is posted when it is ready and after a thorough and thoughtful process,” McArdle said. “To imply anything else is reprehensible.”

Jersey City Assemblyman Raj Mukherji, a co-sponsor of the bill, said it must become law immediately, despite Fireman’s decision to halt plans to expand his golf course.

“There will always be another attempt to grab public parkland from this national treasure to privatize or commercialize until the Protection Act becomes law,” he said. “And what if they succeed under a governor who isn’t as protective of the environment as Phil Murphy?”

When the three-month New Jersey budget was signed into law on June 30, Mukherji issued a statement blasting the hastily added language that would have allowed Fireman to pursue his Liberty State Park lease plan. Jersey City’s other two state lawmakers, McKnight and state Sen. Sandra B. Cunningham, did not issue their own statement.

McKnight said she remains supportive of the Liberty State Protection Act. Cunningham did not respond to a request for comment.

Staff writer Scott Fallon contributed to this article.

Terrence T. McDonald is a reporter for NorthJersey.com, part of the USA Today Network. Email: mcdonaldt@northjersey.com Twitter: @terrencemcd

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Billionaire owner of Liberty National pushes for expansion despite proposed ban

The push by Paul Fireman, owner of Liberty National Golf Club, to build three holes comes at a time when lawmakers may ban such projects.

The billionaire owner of a New Jersey golf club for millionaires still has his sights set on expanding his golf course onto a waterfront portion of Liberty State Park in Jersey City used mostly by children to learn about the ecology of New York Harbor.

The renewed push by Paul Fireman, owner of Liberty National Golf Club, to build three holes on undeveloped Caven Point comes at a time when state lawmakers may ban such projects from New Jersey’s most visited park.

The Legislature is considering a bill that would prohibit large developments at Liberty State Park after 40 years of attempts by developers to build everything from a hotel to an amusement park on land coveted for its panoramic views of Manhattan.

A section of the bill would appear to quash the golf course expansion. It contains language that prohibits “any concession, conveyance, or lease” at Caven Point, a peninsula that juts out into the harbor near the Statue of Liberty.

But a lobbyist for the golf course who has ties to Gov. Phil Murphy asked lawmakers at a recent Senate committee hearing to consider amending the bill to take out the language protecting Caven Point. Eric Shuffler served on Murphy’s “Transition Leadership Team as a senior adviser for strategic communications,” according to his firm’s website.

The committee declined to make amendments but told Shuffler that there “will be continuing discussion.”

Sam Pesin, president of the Friends of Liberty State Park, called the golf proposal “an obscene giveaway to the 1 percent.”

Chris Donnelly, a spokesman for Fireman, said the billionaire and former CEO of Reebok sneakers has the “highest regard” for advocates like Pesin but believes the golf course expansion would benefit the entire park.

The expansion suffered a setback last year when the Murphy administration appeared to turn down the project.

But supporters have long feared that it would be resurrected. They say a May 2018 letter from the Department of Environmental Protection left the door open for future consideration when it told Liberty National it would not pursue the project “at this time.”

A spokeswoman for Murphy did not respond last week to a request for comment.

The issue dates back to the waning days of Gov. Chris Christie’s administration, when Liberty National submitted plans in 2017 to build greens for three holes on 21-acre Caven Point.

The site, a prime habitat for migrating birds, has marshland and a sandy beach where 500 to 600 students each year capture and release fish, crabs, seahorses and other marine life found in local waters.

The proposal generated fierce opposition from park advocates, who said it was another attempt to take away open space from the public and give it to an exclusive golf club that reportedly charges its members $450,000 to join.

Liberty National was built for $150 million by the Fireman family. It sits adjacent to the park on a former landfill and industrial wasteland. It opened in 2006 and has hosted some high-profile tournaments, including the Presidents Cup in 2017, which drew President Donald Trump along with former Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton.

Donnelly said the Fireman family “shares the goal of protecting and enhancing Liberty State Park.”

He said the project would clean Caven Point and generate revenue to improve the entirety of Liberty State Park. The project would also create a golf center “to help support underserved youth in Hudson County.”

Park advocates say Caven Point is fine the way it is and a golf academy is window-dressing for a raid of parkland already used by underserved youth.

“To me and my family it is our playing field as well as our backyard,” Rafael Torres, a retired Jersey City firefighter, told a Senate committee last month. “And one thing we don’t like is someone coming to our backyard to privatize our Hudson home.”