Chase Koepka eyes LIV Golf return; Anthony Kim shares future plans

Chase Koepka eyes LIV Golf return; Anthony Kim shares future plans
Chase Koepka of Smash GC plays his shot from the seventh tee during day two of the LIV Golf Invitational – Orlando at The Orange County National on April 01, 2023 in Orlando, Florida. (Getty Images via AFP)
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Chase Koepka eyes LIV Golf return; Anthony Kim shares future plans

Chase Koepka eyes LIV Golf return; Anthony Kim shares future plans
  • The 31-year-old American is setting his sights on LIV’s Promotions event in January to complete a comeback to the Saudi-backed league
  • Koepka ‘s 8-under-par score at Singapore was matched by Anthony Kim, who is looking to continue a comeback of his own

NEW YORK: Chase Koepka is injury-free and ready to battle his way back to LIV Golf for the first time since being relegated in 2023.

The 31-year-old American is setting his sights on LIV’s Promotions event in January to complete a comeback to the Saudi-backed league, two years after losing his spot with only four top-40 finishes in his second season.

“For me, the nice thing about the Promotions event is that it’s in Florida, it’s a home event,” Koepka told Bunkered. “I haven’t been able to play it for the last two years because of injury, so it would be great to have that opportunity. Good golf takes care of itself.”

Shortly after his 2023 relegation, Koepka suffered an offseason shoulder injury that required major surgery and kept him away from competition for more than a year.

Koepka returned to the golf course in January. He enjoyed a solid stretch before more recent struggles landed him at 44th in the International Series Order of Merit, well off the top-two mark that would have secured a place in LIV next year.

“It has been up and down,” Koepka said of his recent play, after finishing T43 at the Singapore Open last weekend. “I’ve played some solid weeks, but I haven’t quite put myself in contention to win. It’s not that I’m playing badly — just not well enough to be up there with a chance on Sunday. That’s the next step for me.”

Koepka ‘s 8-under-par score at Singapore was matched by Anthony Kim, who is looking to continue a comeback of his own.

Kim returned to professional golf early last year after a 12-year hiatus during which he struggled with addiction and suicidal ideation. Although he was relegated in August after almost two full seasons with LIV, he hopes the January Promotions event will be his ticket to return.

Regardless, the former Ryder Cup winner said he plans to make most of his pro starts next year on the Asian Tour in International Series events.

“It is a long way over here. So as much as I want to compete, you know, part of my comeback to golf is being with my family,” Kim said. “And it is a lot of trouble for the family, so we will pick some events to play.”

The 40-year-old also shared his future commitment to the sport.

“This is something I am looking forward to and yes, regardless, I am going to play for a few more years,” he said. “I do not know how long I want to play golf for, but this is something I am committed to.

“I am motivated to play as good as I can, work as hard as I can, and you know, the results will speak for themselves.”


Sinner opens ATP Finals title defense by beating Auger-Aliassime

Sinner opens ATP Finals title defense by beating Auger-Aliassime
Updated 10 sec ago

Sinner opens ATP Finals title defense by beating Auger-Aliassime

Sinner opens ATP Finals title defense by beating Auger-Aliassime
  • To also claim the year-end No. 1 ranking, Sinner needs to win the season-ending event for the top eight players and hope Carlos Alcaraz doesn’t reach the final
  • Sinner and Alexander Zverev lead the Bjorn Borg group with one win each after Zverev beat Ben Shelton on Sunday
  • The top two finishers in each group advance to the semifinals

TURIN: Jannik Sinner got his title defense at the ATP Finals off to a solid start before his home fans with a 7-5, 6-1 win over Felix Auger-Aliassime on Monday.

To also claim the year-end No. 1 ranking. Sinner needs to win the season-ending event for the top eight players and hope Carlos Alcaraz doesn’t reach the final.

No. 8-ranked Auger-Aliassime appeared slowed by a left calf issue that arose near the end of the first set. He was twice treated by a trainer during the second set.

“It was very tough until 6-5 and then he had a physical issue,” said Sinner, referring to when he broke the Canadian’s serve to close out the first set.

Sinner won the title in Turin last year without dropping a set and hasn’t lost at the event since the 2023 final to Novak Djokovic.

There was a sign held aloft in the crowd that labeled Sinner “Italian pride” and Sinner was serenaded with a soccer-like chant of “Ole, ole, ole. Sin-ner, Sin-ner” during his on-court post-match interview.

“It’s a special tournament and place for me,” he said.

Sinner has won all four of his meetings with Auger-Aliassime this year, including a US Open semifinal and the recent Paris Masters final.

Sinner and Alexander Zverev lead the Bjorn Borg group with one win each after Zverev beat Ben Shelton on Sunday.

The top two finishers in each group advance to the semifinals.

Sinner won 89 percent of the points when he put his first serve in, claiming 32 of those 36 points.

“I have a very difficult group, with people who serve really, really strong,” Sinner said. “You need to remain focused practically the entire match because the moment you concede a break it’s tough to come back.”

Fritz beats weary Musetti

Earlier, Taylor Fritz beat late entry Lorenzo Musetti 6-3, 6-4.

Unlike Musetti, who was making his debut, Fritz has pedigree in the tournament after reaching the final last year and the semifinals on debut in 2022. He’d also spent the past week preparing on the indoor court.

“A very important one to win I would say if I want to make it out of the group,” Fritz said. “He plays quite different with the slices and everything. So it took me some time to get used to it.

“I was able to avoid getting broken early in the match when he had some chances. Then I feel like I kind of got into the match more. … I thought I played really well.”

Musetti was a late replacement for Djokovic, who withdrew with an injured shoulder after beating the Italian in the Athens final on Saturday. Musetti arrived in Turin only on Sunday but couldn’t ride his hometown crowd’s support.

“I couldn’t be at 100 percent in shape, especially physically,” Musetti said. “Mentally, I’m really glad that I’m here. I’m super proud of myself, of my team, of what we achieved. Today, I tried to fight with what I had.”

Fritz and Alcaraz lead the Jimmy Connors group with one win each, while De Minaur and Musetti trail with one loss each.

On Tuesday, Fritz plays Alcaraz and Musetti plays Alex de Minaur.