Tag

Brooks Koepka

Browsing

Tiger Woods Breaks Silence on Brooks Koepka’s First Call After PGA Tour Reinstatement

Brooks Koepka’s return to the PGA Tour has been making headlines for weeks, and behind his comeback stood one man: Tiger Woods. The 35-year-old revealed he was the first person on his call list before officially making the return. Now, days after Koepka’s debut at Torrey Pines, the 15x major champion has finally broken his silence at the SoFi Center, where he was supporting his team in TGL S2.

At Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, a reporter asked: “Tiger, I want to know if you would touch on it real quick. Brooks mentioned you were the first call that he made when trying to reinstate on the PGA TOUR. Any talks of him as a Jupiter native potentially becoming a part of this team down the road?”

Tiger Woods, Brooks Koepka among players skipping Mexico Championship - ESPN

READ: Tiger Woods’ Record in Danger as Justin Rose Delivers Stunning

Woods kept the response simple: “I don’t know that part yet. Brooks just got his feet wet being back on our Tour again at Torrey, and he’s playing Waste Management this week. If Brooks is going to be on a team or not on a team, we have a great team here. My boys here, we’ve had so much fun going back and forth, and these group texts are just awesome.”

For Koepka, the comeback had everything on the line. He faced a hefty penalty under the Returning Member Program: a $5 million charitable donation, forfeited Tour equity bonuses until 2030, and no FedEx Cup bonus payout this season. The PGA Tour estimates these penalties total between $50–85 million in missed earnings.

However, not everyone welcomed his return.

Tiger Woods made the deal happen, but plenty of pros voiced frustration. Michael Kim wrote on X that players were angry. During Koepka’s LIV stint, loyal PGA Tour pros watched him chase guaranteed millions. Now he’s back without grinding through Korn Ferry qualifiers.

Analyst Brandel Chamblee had pushed for harsh punishment, even suggesting a return via Q-School. He argued Koepka was a “marquee legitimizer” whose credibility kept LIV afloat while loyal players paid the price. Tiger Woods and the player-directors carved out a path, but some pros see it as favoritism dressed up as meritocracy.

Through it all, Tiger Woods remained deeply involved. As chairman of the Future Competition Committee and a member of the PGA Tour policy board, the 50-year-old worked tirelessly.

“We worked through Christmas with both boards to make sure this is right,” he explained. There were no days off.

“He’s not taking a spot away from any player,” Woods emphasized. “That was one of the main concerns.”

Woods called Koepka’s return “a win for everyone,” noting it brings back a top-tier player fans demanded.

At the Farmers Insurance Open, Koepka made his return official. He finished tied for 56th at 4-under par. Even the Torrey Pines crowd welcomed him with standing ovations.

“The fans were awesome today,” Koepka said after his opening round. “I think it was very cool to hear, ‘Welcome back.’ It was pretty much every hole.”

But the real story unfolded in his post-round reflections.

What Brooks Koepka said after Torrey Pines

Making the cut was his main goal, and Koepka achieved it. He finished at 4-under, fourteen strokes behind the winner Justin Rose. The warm reception arrived quickly as fans lining the fairways offered encouragement. Koepka responded with fist bumps, autographs, and visible appreciation throughout the week.

“From the first tee on, it was great,” he said. “It actually made me settle down a little bit. It made me feel good just to be out here.” Brooks Koepka admitted he was nervous ahead of his first event back, driven less by concerns about golf and more by how he would be received.

“I just cared about my perception, what people thought or what the fans thought,” Koepka said. “I care about what everybody’s thinking out here. … Just wanted a warm reception.” That reception settled him down from the opening tee shot onward.

Time away from full-time competition shifted his outlook entirely. “I think I’ve fallen back in love with the game,” he said. “Fourteen weeks is a lot of time to think, a lot of time to reflect. … I’m just excited.”

His first tournament is complete. Brooks Koepka now heads to the WM Phoenix Open, ready to continue his journey with Tiger Woods’ support.

Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy presented with golden opportunity by Brooks Koepka

Brooks Koepka’s choice to part ways with LIV Golf after the 2025 season was presented as a personal and friendly decision, but the timing of his departure could align perfectly for him to be picked up by Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy’s TGL digital golf league.

The five-time PGA Tour major champion and high-profile golfer will cease participating in LIV events starting in 2026 after fulfilling this year’s commitments. He pointed to family priorities, including his son Crew with his wife Jena, and a challenging year that included a publicly announced miscarriage in October 2025, as factors influencing his career decisions.

“Family has always guided Brooks’ decisions, and he feels this is the right moment to spend more time at home,” his management team stated. LIV Golf CEO Scott O’Neil also clarified that Koepka’s exit was not related to performance, tension, or politics.

Golf: Tiger Woods, Brooks Koepka, Rory McIlroy among golfers given  exemptions for US Open | The Straits Times

READ: Rory McIlroy confirms reason wife Erica Stoll missed his lat

The TGL joint venture between McIlroy and Woods continues to gather steam, with potential buyers even expressing interest in acquiring expansion franchises beyond the league’s seven teams. The tech-savvy league is based entirely in South Florida, approximately a 17-minute drive from Koepka’s hometown of West Palm Beach.

Koepka resides in Pennock Point, a $9 million waterfront property in Jupiter, situating him less than an hour from the venue and solidly within the same South Florida ecosystem that already includes Woods, McIlroy, and several other top-tier players.

TGL’s schedule fits perfectly with Koepka’s desire to remain close to home, while its television-friendly format suits his requirements. PGA Tour regulations bar players who defect to the rival circuit from competing for one year following their last appearance, making Koepka immediately ineligible.

The PGA Tour responded to the development, stating: “Brooks Koepka is a highly accomplished professional, and we wish him and his family continued success.”

Although no official agreement has been confirmed, fans have already started piecing together clues online, noting that limited options would enable Koepka to maintain proximity to home while remaining involved in elite-level competition.

Speculation heated up earlier this year after Koepka was seen attending a TGL match last February where The Bay Golf Club topped Woods’ Jupiter Links Golf Club. Koepka attracted attention by rising to his feet and applauding Kevin Kisner following a shank shot recognized as the league’s first.

Koepka joined LIV Golf in 2022 through a deal estimated at around $100 million. Despite being contracted through 2026, he departed prior to completing his final season. He led Smash GC as captain but will now be succeeded by Talor Gooch.

TGL’s compensation model included a $21 million prize pool in Season 1, with the championship team collecting $9 million by season’s end. With four players per team, individual payouts exceeded $2 million for each member.

Last year, Atlanta Drive Golf Club triumphed over New York Golf Club 2-0 in the best-of-three finals to clinch the title. The team is composed of Justin Thomas, Patrick Cantlay, Billy Horschel, and Lucas Glover.