Latest news with #BrooksKoepka


The Sun
3 hours ago
- Entertainment
- The Sun
Brooks Koepka's wife Jena Sims goes braless in see-through outfit as golf star dances around wildly in bizarre video
BROOKS KOEPKA'S wife Jena Sims stunned as she went braless in a see-through outfit. The pair let their hair down in a fun video with both wearing eccentric clothes. 7 7 7 7 7 Jena, 36, appeared to show off her outfit to the camera before being gatecrashed by her husband. Koepka burst into shot and hopped around dancing, with Jena initially joining in before deciding it was not worth it. Instead she put out her hands to show off Koepka, and laughed at his bizarre dance moves. Jena still captured fans' attention however thanks to her eye-catching look. She wore a see-through top with no bra, showing off her torso and her legs to send fans wild. One X user said: "Beauty." A third wrote: "She's hot." And another added: "Wait Brooks is in this video?" Jena has built up a large fan base over the years thanks to her racy content. Golf Wag Jena Sims 'test drives her bikinis for summer' with fans unable to pick between skimpy outfits She recently attended the Sports Illustrated Race Weekend Miami Party and was joined by singer Ciara. 7 7


Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Brooks Koepka's stunning wife Jena Sims bares all in risque outfit
Jena Sims, the wife of American golf star Brooks Koepka, left little to the imagination with her outfit of choice in a new Instagram post. Sims - a Sports Illustrated Swimsuit model - posted a series of photos and videos covering her busy antics in recent weeks. One of them showed her and Koepka dressed for and ready to go to what appears to be a pool party and her outfit of choice was particularly risque. Sims wore a sheer blue cropped top with a red trim and red shorts. But she barely maintained her modesty with a pair of decorative rings stamped across her breasts. The 36-year-old has been married to Koepka since 2022, the same year that the five-time major champion defected to the Saudi-backed LIV Golf circuit. The couple, who were part of the Netflix golf docuseries 'Full Swing', share son Crew, who was born in July 2023. The Sports Illustrated model did a playful dance with Koepka for the social media post They are one of the more glamorous couples in golf and Sims regularly posts bikini-clad photos and updates from their exotic lifestyle. Koepka finished tied for 12th at last week's US Open, having missed the cut at both the Masters and PGA Championship earlier in the season. He owns five major titles, but hasn't finished in the top 10 of one since winning the PGA Championship in 2023 at Oak Hill. His last LIV Golf victory was August of last year. At the US Open, Koepka revealed his coach, Pete Cowan, had recently given him a dressing down in a bunker. '(Justin Thomas) thought he had to come check on me in the bunker. We were in there for about 45 minutes, and he was on the other side of the green,' Koepka said. 'I wasn´t happy with it, but it was something I think you need to hear or I needed to hear at the right time. It´s not the first time he´s done it.'


Washington Post
4 days ago
- Sport
- Washington Post
LIV Golf's stars came up short at a major championship. Again.
Didn't those LIV golfers look just a little soft around the chin in the grueling U.S. Open at Oakmont, compared to that mudder of a new champion, J.J. Spaun? The sample size is significant enough now to say it with certainty: LIV is bad for golf, not just the game of golf in general, but specifically your golf, Brooks Koepka, and your golf, Bryson DeChambeau, and your golf, Dustin Johnson, and your golf too, Jon Rahm. Spaun outfought all of them through the pelting rains, the graveyard ditches and the long grasses that curled around the ankles like hostage ropes. After two magnificent birdies on the closing holes in the downpour, he flung his putter in the air and whirled around with his caddie and an umbrella like Mary Poppins, a deserving winner. It was one thing that had separated the seemingly ordinary Spaun from pursuers, that deservingness. He had worked for it and earned it, hardened by 57 rounds of PGA Tour competition in 2025 against some of the toughest setups and fields. Know how many rounds Koepka had played this year on the tourist trap corporate resort courses LIV visits in Riyadh and Singapore and Mexico City, in exchange for fat, easy purses and a reported $100 million in guarantees? Just 28. The players who defected to the Saudi-backed LIV have mouthed various individual rationales, but it all comes down to this: They wanted to make the most amount of money for the least amount of work. LIV, with its 54-hole carnival-like events and suitcases full of guaranteed payouts, is not competition; it's exhibition. That simple fact is beginning to tell heavily on their ability to compete for four rounds in the major championships. No less than former European Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley suggested as much in televised remarks recently. McGinley pointed out that LIV players, allegedly the greatest stars in the game, have won just two of 10 majors since LIV launched (Koepka's 2023 PGA Championship title and DeChambeau's 2024 U.S. Open victory) and they seem to be deteriorating in 2025. 'You need to play competitive golf,' McGinley bluntly told the Golf Channel last month. ' … Bar Brooks and Bryson, the rest have not turned up seriously since they've gone to LIV in these major championships.' Fourteen of them entered the Open at Oakmont; just six made the cut. The supposed super-elites DeChambeau, Johnson, and Joaquín Niemann were at 10 over par after just two rounds, Phil Mickelson at 8 over. Of those who survived to play the weekend, Tyrrell Hatton gave the strongest chase Sunday, before he exhibited what is becoming a LIV signature in majors: a closing fade. It was anyone's tournament with nine holes left to play and double bogeys more common than hot dogs. At one point seven players were within a stroke of each other. 'The back nine was just all about fighting,' said runner-up Robert MacIntyre, a left-handed Scot. MacIntyre, Viktor Hovland, Cameron Young and Scottie Scheffler all fought, and made late charges, each birdieing the 17th hole. Hatton? He bogeyed it, and the 18th too. Hatton was LIV's best quality-of-play representative, along with Rahm, who could have been a factor with his final-round 67, but couldn't make up for a combined 8 over par in the middle rounds. It's worth noting that Hatton and Rahm only joined LIV in the winter of 2024, so perhaps their games aren't fully corroded yet. Competing in a major is not ordinary golf. It's an utterly draining experience that takes all kinds of physical stamina and acquired resilience. Listen to Scheffler talk about what winning the PGA Championship last month at Quail Hollow did to him. 'It's really hard to describe to somebody that hasn't really lived through it just because of — I mean, when I woke up after the PGA Championship this year, I literally felt like I got hit by a bus. Like I felt terrible. And it's just part of the adrenaline, part of competing for four days on a really difficult golf course, keeping your head in it for 72 holes, which is a long time, and just mentally it's exhausting. Physically it's a grind too.' LIV players are losing their fitness for the grind. One might have expected two-time U.S. Open champion Koepka to make a run. Instead, he bogeyed three of his first five holes and two of his last four, finishing 6 over and tied for 12th. Koepka is now 20 over par in three majors this season, with missed two cuts in two of them. The fade factor has been noticeable in DeChambeau's performance too. He played just 15 rounds of LIV golf heading into the Masters. Dynamic ability and range work could only get him so far. Small wonder he shot a final-round 75 at Augusta, got smoked by Scheffler down the stretch in the PGA and could not keep it in the fairway at the merciless Oakmont, blowing up with a second-round 77. 'He was living in the rough there [these] last couple days,' Johnny Miller remarked at a Saturday news conference with Jack Nicklaus. 'Of course he gets to watch it on TV today.' Nicklaus snickered. LIV talents can make themselves viable on more forgiving courses, but Oakmont was utterly exposing. PGA Tour players were simply better equipped to handle it. On average, the rough at a regular PGA Tour event is two and half to four inches deep. At Oakmont it was over five inches, and the long grasses were 18 inches. The green speed stimpmeter reading — the distance a ball rolls, measured in feet — on a PGA course is usually between 11 and 12. At Oakmont it hovered around 14 or above. Those LIV tracks are not designed to hone great players, they're designed to entertain duffers. No one was better than those former champions Miller and Nicklaus at summarizing the body and mind required to play competitively at Oakmont, much less win. Miller, looking at Nicklaus sitting next to him, said, 'Who do you think, once the bell rang on Thursday, who do you think believed he deserves to win?' On Sunday, that was J.J Spaun. You got the feeling that deep in their bones, the LIV players knew someone else was more deserving, too.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Brooks Koepka's Wife Turns Heads With U.S. Open Outfit
Brooks Koepka's 2025 major season hasn't been too kind to the five-time major champion. He missed the cut at the Masters back in April before following that up with another missed cut at the PGA Championship in May. Fast forward to June, however, and Koepka is looking like his old self again - the old self that finished in the top five in every major tournament in 2019. Advertisement During the first round of the U.S. Open on Thursday, June 12, Koepka opened his front nine with an eagle to sit at 2-under and just two shots off the lead. He carded two bogeys on the back nine to drop to even par before finishing his round with back-to-back birdies to sit in contention at a major once again. "I thought I played pretty consistently, drove it really well," Koepka said. "Iron play was pretty good. When I did miss it, I felt like I missed it in the correct spots. A couple of good bunker shots. I missed one little short [putt] on 14 maybe. Other than that, I thought I played very solid. I'm really happy with the way I finished, and hopefully it leads into tomorrow." Koepka, who has won the U.S. Open twice, has the support of his wife, Jena, and their son, Crew. "Jena, Crew and @bkoepka sharing a moment after his solid grind on the first day 💪," the caption of a post from LIV Golf read. Advertisement View the original article to see embedded media. Earlier in the week she showed off one of her outfits for a practice round before Koepka's first round on Thursday. View the original article to see embedded media. Koepka knows the course is only going to get more difficult as the week rolls on. "It's still not as firm as a typical U.S. Open probably is," he said. "I mean, I understand there was rain on Sunday night, so I get it, but it's still -- it's going to have some heat to it this weekend." Related: Scottie Scheffler Sent Strong Message to Wife Meredith Before U.S. Open Brooks Koepka's Wife Turns Heads With U.S. Open Outfit first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 13, 2025
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Adam Scott Gets Another Chance at a Major Victory
Adam Scott Gets Another Chance at a Major Victory originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Adam Scott stood on the 15th tee with one hand firmly placed on the Claret Jug. Starting the final round with a four-shot lead over Graeme McDowell, he was never really pressured as he was sitting at 10-under after making a birdie at the 14th hole with a lead that seemed insurmountable. Advertisement Then the wheels came off, and Scott fell like a stone from winning his first Open Championship to finishing second to Ernie Els with four consecutive bogeys. That was the 2012 Open Championship at Royal Lytham & St. Annes Golf Club. Thirteen years later, Scott, now 44, will enter a final round of a major in the last group for only the third time in his career. In 2012, Scott was paired with McDowell, and in the 2018 PGA Championship at Bellerive Country Club, the Australian was paired with eventual winner Brooks Koepka. 'Everyone out here has got their journey, you know,' Scott said after his 3-under 67. 'Putting ourselves in these positions doesn't just happen by fluke. It's not easy to do it. I really haven't been in this kind of position for five or six years, or feeling like I'm that player. But that's what I'm always working towards. It's not that easy to figure it all out.' Adam Scott plays his shot from the third tee during the third round of the U.S. Open golf tournament. Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Scott began his attempt to win his second major title even par at the halfway point. But the day didn't start well, as he made an early bogey on the first hole when he missed the green just right and didn't get up and down from 67 feet. Advertisement From then on, Scott would steady the ship and make only the one bogey. He birdied the 4th, 13th, 14th and 17th holes to move up the leaderboard methodically. 'It was a good one,' Scott said of his four-birdie performance. 'I played really well, although I was fairly safe, doing my best job at par golf. The softer conditions made for a couple more opportunities, and I made a few good shots that led to birdies coming in, and I put myself in a good position going into tomorrow.' Scott's position and subsequent contention stem from his newfound success with his driver, who has been a part of his recent repertoire. The Aussie showed all the signs of playing a well-rounded game on Saturday. Advertisement Using Strokes-Gained as a measure, Scott in the third round was 8th in SG: Off the Tee, SG: Approach 20th, SG: Short Game 5th and 14th in SG: Putting. 'I started hitting it better off the tee in the last month, and usually over my career, I've seen that bleed through the rest of the game. I've slowly done it. I'm not exactly firing on all cylinders. But it's a nice thing having some confidence coming into tomorrow.' On Saturday in 2012, Scott was excited about Sunday's final round. 'No matter what the result, it's going to be an incredible experience for me,' Scott said. 'And I truly believe I can go out and play a great round of golf, no matter what the conditions.' Advertisement Now, Scott sees Sunday slightly differently, but it still seems to be with the confidence he had at Royal Lytham. 'For sure, I'll be nervous, but I'm in a great spot,' Scott said. 'I'm happy to be one behind, not sleeping on the lead, and that kind of stuff. It's a big day tomorrow. A bunch of guys are in the mix, and probably now that it's softer, I'll need to play a really good round of golf. Someone's going to do it. It's not going to be disastrous all day.' Related: Rory McIlroy Breaks His Silence at U.S. Open This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 15, 2025, where it first appeared.