Brooks Koepka's wife Jena Sims recently made a shirt for his son Crew after an online website delayed the delivery of a shirt she ordered. Sims gave the update on her Instagram Story.
Brooks Koepka and Jena Sims met for the first time at the 2015 Masters and made their relationship public at the 2017 US Open. The duo got engaged in 2021 and married in June 2022. In July 2023, the couple became parents to their son Crew, who is currently 16 months old.
In the recent Instagram Story by Sims, a white t-shirt could be seen lying flat on a glass table with the text "Leg Day" and a graphic of a chicken drumstick above it. In the caption, she shared that she made the shirt from a Cricut machine used to replicate the shirt she purchased online.
Sims captioned the story:
"Ordered a shirt off Etsy for Crew and it didn’t arrive in time so I fired up the Cricut and made the exact one I ordered."
In another Story, Sims's son Crew could be seen wearing the same "Leg Day" shirt with beige shorts. She humorously captioned the story:
"We don’t skip it."
Meanwhile, Brooks Koepka is enjoying his downtime following the end of the 2024 LIV Golf season. Koepka was recently seen with his wife and son Crew at Chase Koepka's Hall of Fame induction at the University of South Florida. The couple were also seen at the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show last month.
Brooks Koepka's wife Jena Sims shares update on their son's progress with helmet
Brooks Koepka's wife Jena Sims recently shared an update on Crew's progress with the helmet. The toddler has been seen wearing a helmet on several occasions. The 16-month-old was born seven weeks prematurely to Sims via emergency C-section.
As a result, Crew initially stayed in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), leading to Flat Head Syndrome and the need for a corrective helmet. In a recent AMA session on Instagram, she also wrote that the cranial technologies stopped after 18 months and Crew won't be needing it after 18 months as the head will formed by then.
"I swear these places either give you a script or they don't. They follow a script, but they don't really tell you an end date. I do know that Cranial Technologies doesn't treat past 18 months because, you know, your head is already formed by then," she said.
She also shared that Crew's helmet has corrected problem areas significantly.
"We know what the problem areas are, but it looks so much better, and we were so happy with the progress. Now, it's helpful because he's running into the countertops and stuff, so we kind of like it," she added.
Koepka's son also wears a Pavlik Harness, designed to treat Hip Dysplasia in infants.