Brooks Koepka received a warm reception from fans and fellow players upon his return to the PGA Tour at the WM Phoenix Open. The event highlights the tour's new Returning Member Program, allowing former LIV Golf participants like Koepka and Patrick Reed to rejoin. Players expressed relief at reuniting top talent amid golf's ongoing divide.
The WM Phoenix Open kicked off under overcast skies at TPC Scottsdale, where Brooks Koepka, a five-time major champion, made his PGA Tour comeback after four years with LIV Golf. Emerging onto the notorious 16th hole, Koepka drew the loudest cheers of the afternoon, signaling a shift in golf's fractured landscape.
Koepka joined Xander Schauffele and Cameron Young in a marquee group, though he posted a 4-over par score on Thursday, among the day's poorer marks. Despite the rough start, his presence boosted the field's competitive edge. The tournament expanded its field from 120 to 123 players to accommodate Koepka under the PGA Tour's Returning Member Program, which requires former LIV members to serve suspensions and meet conditions like charitable donations.
Fellow players voiced strong support for the reintegration. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler noted, “I think people want the best people playing together again,” adding that having champions like Koepka and Reed—set to return later in 2026—benefits the tour, fans, and sponsors. Rickie Fowler emphasized competitive integrity, saying, “I’m all for getting guys back,” to avoid asterisks on victories without top rivals.
Max Homa echoed the sentiment: “You just want to play against the best players.” Webb Simpson affirmed, “This is where the best players in the world want to play.” Even Viktor Hovland, while noting potential precedents, agreed it strengthens fields. The program also reinstated Hudson Swafford, Kevin Na, and Pat Perez, though Perez remains suspended until January 2027.
This development follows Patrick Reed's announcement last week to leave LIV and rejoin the PGA Tour by summer's end. Amid past tensions, the returns signal progress toward unified competition, with players like Homa lamenting missed rivalries such as Jon Rahm versus Scheffler. The Phoenix Open, known as the People's Open, embodied this optimism, drawing crowds eager for golf's elite to compete together again.