We are a tick over a week out from the year's second men's major – The PGA Championship at Valhalla Country Club in Kentucky.
Rightfully so, the narrative will be around the World No.1 Scottie Scheffler and who can stop this golfing giant the Texan has morphed into over the last two years. And in the most recent issue of Golf Australia magazine, this writer was very much in that camp, too.
However, the more I have thought about it, I've arrived at Brooks Koepka as being the man everyone must catch at the PGA Championship.
Valhalla will illustrate a different setup to what we saw last year at Oak Hill, but the principles of success will be the same. Dumb it down, keep it out of the thick stuff and know what holes and pins you can attack; otherwise, plonk it into the middle of the putting surface, putt it twice and move on to the next.
The two names mentioned do this better than most. However, with a Wanamaker Trophy on the line, the bloke with three of them in his cabinet is the man to beat. He just knows what to do at these things.
That is not to say Scheffler doesn't. If it was the Open Championship coming up, he'd be the man. I am not sticking my neck out too much by saying that. It seems relatively obvious.
However, a PGA or U.S Open, where the setups are always coined as the toughest, requires some guts and some mongrel to not get worn down by the golf course. It is Koepka every day of the week.
Koepka, off the golf course, is outspoken and blunt and comes across as rude in some of his encounters with the media. I would say Matthew Wolff would likely agree on that front.

The 34-year-old is clearly a hugely confident guy who couldn't give a flying you-know-what about what anyone thinks of him. A big personality and almost a supervillain, especially in the sport's current climate.
You know he thinks he will win; he believes he is the best, but while he is out on the golf course in a major championship, nobody is better at putting their ego in their back pocket and playing the waiting game than the five-time major champion.
"I still have the same expectations every time I go to tee it up, and that's to win. Those are my expectations; what I want to do," Koepka said after LIV Singapore, which he won.

Not only does LIV's hottest property expect to be lifting a trophy at the end of any week he plays, he does the boring stuff better than the next guy; a clinical operator in playing defence. This is a testament to his mental fortitude; he is a big, strapping lad with the speed, accuracy and undoubted ability to bully a golf course. And he doesn't just do that at the ones that count.
He detaches himself emotionally, plays the hand he is dealt and makes fewer mistakes than the others - just some of the reasons he is the man to stop when a Wanamaker trophy is on the line.
"I think the big thing that kind of separates me is my ability to lock in and go someplace where I think a lot of guys can't go," Koepka says.

Time and time again, Koepka flies under the radar and come major championship Sunday, everybody thinks, 'Wow, this guy, again?!'
There is no excuse for those thoughts before or during this year's tournament. He has given everyone a timely reminder of the heavy hitter he is.
Koepka claimed the individual title at LIV Singapore over the weekend in very different conditions to what he will encounter at Valhalla, becoming the first player to win four LIV Golf individual titles. He should rightfully be in the forefront of everyone's minds when the PGA Championship week gets underway. Regardless of what anybody argues, the strength of the Singapore field was elite; he beat some of the best in the business and made history in the process.
Yes, nobody is playing as consistently well as Scheffler – in the men's game, at least. But when we are talking about favouritism at the PGA, it may be close, but the man with the runs on the board gets this scribbler's benefit of the doubt.
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