Back-to-back PGA Championship wins: ✅— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) May 19, 2019
4 major championships in less than 2 years: ✅
Now ranked No. 1 in the world: ✅
Brooks Koepka is dominating. pic.twitter.com/Hlptqfa73a
🏆 2017 U.S. Open— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) May 19, 2019
🏆 2018 U.S. Open
🏆 2018 PGA Championship
🏆 2019 PGA Championship@BKoepka collects trophies in bunches.#LiveUnderPar pic.twitter.com/yVqLEemuCJ
— Justin Ray (@JustinRayGolf) May 19, 2019
https://www.tomahawknation.com/2019/5/17/18628840/fsu-brooks-koepka-wins-pga-championship-final-round-golf-florida-state-seminoles-2019-beth-page
Golf U 🏌️ pic.twitter.com/V42ZpuvGq5— SingleShot ⚾⚽🏀🏐🎾⛳🎽📚 (@Singleshot25) May 19, 2019
Brooks is now up by 8 at the #PGAChamp . The largest 54-hole leads in major championship history: 10 shots, Henry Cotton, '34 Open; 10 shots, Tiger Woods, '00 U.S. Open; 9 shots, Tiger Woods, '97 Masters.— Bob Harig (@BobHarig) May 18, 2019
What an absolutely insane statistic.— Sports Illustrated (@SInow) May 17, 2019
Near perfection through two days for Koepka pic.twitter.com/hcTt1xUUbi
...if Koepka wins this week, he’ll have won four of the last eight majors.— Matt Ginella (@MattGinellaGC) May 16, 2019
...from ‘71 PGA to ‘73 PGA, Nicklaus won four of nine majors.
...from 2000 PGA to 2002 U.S. Open, Tiger won six of 11 majors.
With a first-round 63, @BKoepka becomes the third player with multiple career scores of 63 or better at majors, joining Greg Norman and Vijay Singh.— PGA TOUR Communications (@PGATOURComms) May 16, 2019
Norman: 1986 The Open (R2), 1996 Masters (R1)
Singh: 1993 PGA (R2), 2003 U.S. Open (R2)
Koepka: 2018 PGA (R2), 2019 PGA (R1)
Koepka the first player to shoot 63 in a major in consecutive years.— Doug Ferguson (@dougferguson405) May 16, 2019
The lowest opening round by a defending PGA Champion. pic.twitter.com/O4E93LTX4Z— PGA Championship (@PGAChampionship) May 16, 2019
There have been 17 rounds of 63 in the 103-year history of the PGA Championship.— Kenny Morales (@KennyMoralesTV) May 16, 2019
Former #FSU standout Brooks Koepka is the first to do it twice. https://t.co/YBu3mqU1EZ
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