
Brooks Koepka returned to the PGA Tour this week. The five-time major winner looked a little rusty but made the cut to play the weekend.
“I just wanted to play four rounds,” Koepka said Friday at the stadium Open Farmers Insurance.
Koepka will be the first to tell you that he hasn’t played Brooks Koepka golf in the past year plus. He was a non-factor at four majors last year and hasn’t really been heard from on the big stage since his win at the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill. During his pre-tournament press conference Tuesday, Koepka wouldn’t lay the blame for his Brooks-like play at the feet of LIV Golf or the league’s program. He is the one who did not execute. Plain and simple.
Kopeka said he looks forward to competing on the PGA Tour again and facing off against Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy more than four times a year. That means a lot to golf’s big alpha. But competitive enthusiasm was secondary on Koepka’s main reason for breaking away from LIV Golf and engineering his return to the PGA Tour.
“Just my family,” Koepke said before the tournament about the biggest factor in his return. “A lot has happened in the last five, six months with my family. That played a big part in the comeback.
“Just having my family is very important. I’ve grown a lot over the last few years and especially the last few months. Just being able to be around them is very important to me.”
So Koepka came out Thursday at Torrey Pines and shot a one over 73 in the south course. He drove it poorly (six of 14 fairways) and missed 1,469 shots on the green. There were no resounding statements from Koepka’s first 18 holes. Golf is a sport of continuous success. A weak or mediocre round here and there means little in the big picture. Whether Koepka can return to his major championship-killing form will be determined in the coming months.
But it’s what came after his first PGA Tour round in almost three years that spoke volumes.
Koepka said at the start of the first round that he was nervous. Nervous to face the media, fans and some of the PGA Tour members who may still be upset with his initial decision to leave LIV Golf. On the surface, that doesn’t sit well with Koepka, who famously cared little about anything other than winning majors. The bold and eccentric major champion rarely entertained the opinions of others.
So what gives? Growing up — as Koepka said — becoming a father and going through the peaks and valleys of life off the course has a way of giving you perspective. The passage of time has a way of easing all things.
“Just because I care,” Koepka said after the first round. “I think I fell in love with the game again. And honestly, watching my son play a little bit and wanting to see him watching me, or I think I want him to watch me play well and realize how much this game has given me and how much fun it is and how great it is to be here.”
Koepka came out Friday looking for something on the North Course to play into the weekend. A four-under 68 accomplished it. What did it mean? Two more rounds to begin the next chapter of Brooks Koepka’s professional life. That’s it.
He was 14 shots behind 36-hole leader Justin Rose. The Brooks Koepka we’re used to may find it irritating or see the whole prospect of a January tournament in San Diego as nothing more than practice repetition of what matters. It used to be nothing more than a shadow fly to temporarily tolerate.
But it was Koepka walking to the media after his first PGA Tour cut in almost three years, holding his son, Crew. Cameras caught Koepka asking the crew if they had seen any planes or anything interesting during his afternoon in the Southern California sun. That’s why Koepka wanted to come back, for moments like this.
“Did you have fun? Did you see any planes today?”
Before Brooks takes questions from the media, he asks Crew Koepka some questions of his own ❤️ pic.twitter.com/4T3wjngKKQ
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 31, 2026
“It was great, it was great,” Koepka said to greet his wife and son after he left the 18th green. “I don’t know the last time I had a cut and they were still there. … It was good to have them there. It felt good. I don’t know, my son doesn’t really know what’s going on, but it’s good for me to have them here.”
Brooks Koepka is back on the PGA Tour. He will play this weekend at Torrey Pines and next week at the WM Phoenix Open. Those six or eight rounds will be irrelevant to the bigger picture, both for Koepka the golfer and Koepka the family man.
It has been said that time is a river. In one we go fishing and in one where events create ripples – some that dissipate quickly and others whose impact never leaves us.
Brooks Koepka returned to the PGA Tour for his family. As the San Diego sun beat down on Brooks and Crew Koepka on Friday, there was a ripple in Koepka’s river — one that might be as meaningful as any putt.

