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How Tiger Woods Admits His Involvement in Brooks Koepka’s PGA

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Tiger Woods Admits His Involvement in Brooks Koepka’s PGA Tour Comeback

Brooks Koepka’s return to the PGA Tour became the headline of every newspaper. However, behind the headlines stood Tiger Woods, the 15-time major champion who hustled through negotiations, working with both boards.

Fresh off medical clearance to hit mid irons, Tiger Woods dropped the bombshell about his pivotal role. “It’s incredible for the tour and for the fans who want to see the best play against the best,” he revealed per the post shared by TWSPOT. “We worked through Christmas with both boards to make sure this is right.”

The process began on December 23 when the Grand Slam winner received Koepka’s letter requesting reinstatement. Woods and the board members immediately took the letter to both boards, working to implement a fair plan that addressed the 35-year-old time away, penalties, fines, the integration process, and bonus payouts.

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“We had lots of subsequent meetings, worked through the holidays,” Woods explained at the SoFi Center. “There were no days off. We just worked through it day after day after day.”

Woods wasn’t just signing off on decisions; he was actively shaping them over the holidays with both the PGA Tour and LIV Golf boards.
Woods was very clear about how he felt about meritocracy. “He is going to be playing a full field of events and he has the ability to earn his way up to the signature events. If he’s good, he’s good. If he plays great, he plays great. If he wins tournaments, he wins tournaments. There’s no reason why we should hold him back.”

And let’s not forget he had the power to do it. He has been the vice chairman of PGA Tour Enterprises since March 2024 and the chair of the Future Competition Committee. Alongside Patrick Cantlay, Adam Scott, Webb Simpson, Jordan Spieth, and Peter Malnati. All six of these players’ votes helped make this move happen.

Brooks Koepka is back under strict conditions through the Returning Member Program, which is only open to former members who won majors or The Players Championship between 2022 and 2025. He’ll donate $5 million to charity, forgo his Tour equity bonuses until 2030, and could lose between $50 million and $85 million in total. He has to start over from scratch, with full field events and no guaranteed spots in signature tournaments until he earns them.

The 50-year-old was happy that Koepka wanted to come back a year early, which fans had asked for through last year’s fan initiative program. The Fan Forward program, which started in 2024 and had more than 50,000 participants, was the biggest fan outreach in Tour history. It showed that fans wanted to see the best players compete against each other, one of four main areas identified through never-before-seen polling. PGA TOUR Koepka’s return directly answers that mandate by bringing back the top-level competition that the LIV split had broken up.

Not only that, but this decision also aligns with Brian Rolapp’s goal to evolve the PGA and make it the best.

Koepka will make his debut at the Farmers Insurance Open on January 29.

Additionally, this comeback has opened a box of discussion, which has divided the golf circuit.

Golf’s elite split on Tiger Woods’ power move

Woods made the deal happen, but not everyone is happy about it. Michael Kim shared his thoughts on X, writing, “Guys are pissed.” During the LIV introduction, PGA TOUR players who stayed loyal saw Koepka chase guaranteed millions. Now he’s back without having to go through Korn Ferry qualifiers.

Brandel Chamblee, an analyst, wasn’t much of a supporter of the decision either. He said Koepka should start over with Monday qualifiers instead of just walking into Tour events. Chamblee said that Koepka was a “marquee legitimizer” whose credibility kept LIV going while loyal players paid the price. It’s not about talent; it’s about principle. Woods and the player-directors have carved out a path, but some pros think it’s just favouritism dressed up as meritocracy.

Meanwhile, during a TGL match, Rory McIlroy changed the game with his stance. When asked if Koepka should come back soon, he said, “Absolutely. What Brooks has done in the game of golf, it would be good for everyone to have him back.”

Jordan Spieth, who was also in that committee with Tiger Woods, offered him advice amid all the criticism. All he wanted Koepka to focus on was his game and give his best. And most importantly, not to pay much attention to the outside voices.

Tiger Woods opened the door, but can Brooks silence the doubters and earn back respect one tournament at a time?

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