Brooks Koepka’s ‘deep’ career question has already been answered

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Brooks Koepka (Photo by Alex Goodlett/Getty Images)

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Brooks Koepka couldn’t find the words. Now firmly back as a member of the PGA Tour, Koepka, a five-time major champion and one of the defining players of his generation, was confronted with a big-picture question this week. It was the type of question that only those who have already etched their name in history face, but one Koepka was unsure of how to answer as his PGA Tour comeback rolls on.

What do you want your legacy to be?

“I don’t know,” Koepka said on Wednesday at the Cognizant Classic. “I feel like that’s a very deep question. I don’t know what I want my legacy to be. I kind of don’t think about it. I just try to be the best person, best golfer I can be, and then wherever things settle up, they settle up. I just don’t want to look back at the end of my career and say, man, I really could have put more effort in and just give everything I’ve got, 100 percent effort, and trying to win as many tournaments and be as dedicated as I can to the game.”

Perhaps on the surface, Koepka doesn’t know what he wants his legacy to be. To think about legacy is to think about mortality, to come to terms with the end and imagine a time when you are not who you are and have always been. But athletes whose achievements will echo across generations — those who have done things few can claim — often already have a sense of how they will be remembered. They tell us so in how they work to change it or strengthen it. It’s why the losses and misses often mean more than the wins. Those, as Scottie Scheffler noted, are often fleeting.

Koepka’s major wins didn’t come at an early age, as they did for Tiger or Rory or Spieth, but once he broke through, one win turned to four in a flash. He almost instantly became his generation’s great major killer. Four majors is a lot, but when you win four, everyone starts to wonder if you’ll win eight or nine or 10. You probably do too. Four majors in three years might be the first line of Koepka’s World Golf Hall of Fame plaque. But the body of it will be about his persona as the big-game hunter — golf’s elite competitor who showed up in elite tournaments and elevated himself in the moments that truly mattered.

Injury and poor play in 2022 allowed Koepka to be consumed by doubt. He wasn’t sure if he would ever be who he once was again. He joined LIV Golf and then built himself back. He won the 2023 PGA Championship to eclipse Rory McIlroy’s major total and become the defining major winner of his era (McIlroy has now matched him). The doubts evaporated to reveal who Koepka is at his core — someone who, like his childhood idol Tiger Woods, relishes the grind. The payoff is nice, but it’s everything that leads to it; the discipline, the consistency and the fight that makes it worthwhile.

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