HONOLULU — Brooks Koepka is back on the PGA Tour, a decision that should have surprised no one.
Brian Rolapp, only five months into his role as CEO of PGA Tour Enterprises, faced what he called a ''unique situation." Koepka wanted to return after four years on LIV Golf, where he pulled in more than $41.6 million in earnings — more than he made in nine seasons on the PGA Tour — to go along with a signing bonus Koepka had said was nine figures. Count the commas.
That led to emergency meetings, phone calls with key voices on tour, board approval of a path that let Koepka back in and finally a face-to-face meeting with the former captain of Smash GC.
All of that was necessary. But the answer could be found last August when Rolapp was 18 days into his new job and introduced buzzwords like ''scarcity'' and ''simplicity'' while discussing his plans for significant — not incremental — change on the PGA Tour.
He was asked about the priority of getting the best players together, even as the tour's negotiations with Saudi Arabia as an investor had become too broken for even President Donald Trump to fix.
''To the extent we can do anything that's going to further strengthen the PGA Tour, we'll do that,'' Rolapp said that day. ''And I'm interested in exploring whatever strengthens the PGA Tour.''
Whether the return of Koepka achieves that depends on how he plays.
His performance also will determine whether the punishment fits the crime of his defection to Saudi-funded LIV Golf in 2022. By the tour's math — based largely on Koepka not getting equity in the tour for five years — it could be as much as $85 million.