For the third time in the last 18 LIV Golf regular-season tournaments, Brooks Koepka will take a three-shot lead entering the final round, thanks to a brilliant seven-under 64 in Saturday’s rain-delayed second round at LIV Golf Singapore.
The previous two times Koepka has held that large of an advantage, he closed the deal in Orlando and Jeddah last year. Given that the five-time Major champion has found his form as his PGA Championship title defence looms later this month, it will be a big challenge for his Singapore pursuers to catch him.
Talor Gooch, the defending Singapore champion, described the task succinctly. “Hard,” he said.
But, he added, not impossible. “Winning golf tournaments is never easy. We all know that. Hopefully we can make it not easy on him. Hopefully I can make it not easy on him tomorrow.”
Koepka is at 12 under for the tournament, with Abraham Ancer, Adrian Meronk, Thomas Pieters and Matthew Wolff tied for second at nine under.
Four other players are another shot back – Gooch, Lucas Herbert and Marc Leishman, and Cameron Tringale.
South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen is at six under after carding 69, with countryman Dean Burmester (70) on five under.
If Koepka converts the three-shot lead into another victory, he will become the first LIV Golf player to win four individual tournaments. And he also has a chance to lift two trophies on Sunday if his Smash team can convert its one-shot lead over the Rippers into the team title.
Although he’s playing with plenty of confidence, Koepka is not taking anything for granted.
“Anything is possible,” he said. “Gooch is trailing. He plays this place pretty well. I’ve just got to go out and do what I do, and from there, you can get beat. I have no problem with that if I get beat. But I just want to go out and play good golf, and that’s all I want to do, especially leading into the PGA.”
That good golf was evident following the four hour, 45 minute weather delay that pushed the shotgun start back to the afternoon. After three pars to start his round, Koepka birdied the par-five 4th when he threaded his second shot between a row of palm trees, his ball finishing just off the green.
That was the first of three consecutive birdies, and he finished his bogey-free round with four birdies in his last seven holes. A two-shot sequence seemed to epitomise his day – a 53-foot birdie putt on the 13th, then a near-ace on the 14th.
“Brooks was faultless today,” said Pieters, one of his playing partners on Saturday with first-round leader Sebastián Muñoz. “I assume he’s going to do the same tomorrow, and it’s going to take a very low one from those of us behind him to win.”
“He’s comfortable being in the lead,” added Wolff. “He’s playing good. I think this golf course actually suits him really well. I’ll do what I can control, and other than that, just see what happens.”
Koepka has his wife Jena and nine-month-old son Crew in Singapore with him this week. It’s the third tournament that Crew has attended. The first was at LIV Golf Miami; the second was at The Masters. The father finished T45 both times.
“I was reminded of that on the way over here,” Koepka said. “Hopefully get a little better result.”
Photo: Lionel Ng/Getty Images