SAN DIEGO — Brooks Koepka was freed from the final year of his contract with Saudi-funded LIV Golf and the first person he called was Tiger Woods. Three weeks later, the PGA Tour created a path back for him that starts at Torrey Pines.
Koepka said Tuesday he can't wait for the week to end because of all the attention. The gratitude of returning to the PGA Tour comes with the kind of nerves the five-time major champion rarely experiences — wondering that others think about him.
''It feels a little bit different,'' he said ahead of the Farmers Insurance Open, his first non-major on the PGA Tour since he lost in the quarterfinals of the Match Play in March 2022. ''I'm definitely a little bit more nervous this week just coming back. But it feels good. I'm super grateful to be back.''
Koepka cited the need to be closer to family as his main reason for wanting out of LIV. His wife announced in early October she had a pregnancy loss at 16 weeks.
Woods was partially responsible for Koepka's path back, along with other player-directors on the PGA Tour board who worked with CEO Brian Rolapp in coming up with a plan for select players to return. Koepka is the first LIV defector, and it came at a price.
He is making a $5 million charity contribution (still to be decided with the tour), receives no FedEx Cup bonus money this year and has no access to equity shares in the PGA Tour for five years, a value the tour has estimated at $50 million and beyond.
He also can't play the $20 million signature events until he qualifies on his own.
''I guess it's a fresh start for me, which is cool,'' Koepka said. ''It's just another chapter I guess in my book. I'm excited for that. I feel like my game's in pretty good shape and I want to see where it's at. Obviously this week is a little bit different. Would just like to get this week over and just feel like I can start playing golf again.''