HONOLULU — Brooks Koepka is expecting a nervous energy when he returns to a regular PGA Tour event for the first time in four years at the Farmers Insurance Open. Only some of that pertains to his golf.
How he is received — inside and outside the ropes — remains to be seen as the first player to be invited back to the PGA Tour after taking at Saudi riches to defect to LIV Golf in 2022.
''I've got a lot of work to do with some of the players,'' Koepka said in a telephone interview Monday. "There's definitely guys who are happy, and definitely guys who will be angry. It's a harsh punishment financially. I understand exactly why the tour did that — it's meant to hurt. But it (his departure) hurt a lot of people.
''If anyone is upset, I need to rebuild those relationships.''
Koepka was allowed back under a one-time ''Returning Member Program'' the PGA Tour board developed and approved last week. It applies only to players who have won a major or The Players Championship since 2022
The penalty is a $5 million contribution to a charity the tour will help decide, no access to FedEx Cup bonus money in 2026, no sponsor exemptions to the $20 million signature events and, most importantly, no equity grants in the tour for the next five years.
The tour estimates based on Koepka performing at the level allowed to win five majors, the financial repercussions could be worth anywhere from $50 million to $85 million.
''There was no negotiating,'' Koepka said about his conversation last week with Brian Rolapp, the CEO of PGA Tour Enterprises. ''It's meant to hurt, it does hurt, but I understand. It's not supposed to be an easy path. There's a lot of people that were hurt by it when I left, and I understand that's part of coming back.''