The Province

MAJOR COUP FOR SPIETH

New British Open champion joins rare company by winning his third major before age 24

- DOUG FERGUSON

SOUTHPORT, England — Jordan Spieth is the British Open champion, just like expected. But not like anyone could have imagined.

On the verge of another meltdown in a major, so wild off the tee that he played one shot from the driving range at Royal Birkdale and lost the lead for the first time all weekend, Spieth bounced back with a collection of clutch shots, delivering a rally that ranks among the best ever.

A near ace. A 50-foot eagle putt. A 30-foot birdie putt.

Spieth played the final five holes in 5 under and closed with a 1-under 69 for a three-shot victory over Matt Kuchar, giving him the third leg of the career Grand Slam and a chance to be the youngest to win them all next month at the PGA Championsh­ip.

Austin Connelly (73), a dual Canadian-American citizen who was born in Irving, Texas, and registered with a club in Nova Scotia, tied for 14th at 2 under. The 20-year-old caught a flight to Hamburg, Germany, immediatel­y after finishing his final round to begin preparatio­ns for the European Tour’s Porsche European Open this week.

Connelly was offered a spot in the PGA Tour’s RBC Canadian Open this week at Glen Abbey in Oakville, Ont., but his decision to remain on the European Tour likely wasn’t too difficult. The British Open result and the US$128,917 paycheque pushed Connelly up 56 spots to 112th in the European Tour rankings. The top 111 at season’s end earn full European Tour status for next season, something Connelly does not have this year.

“Very successful, it was mission accomplish­ed this week for sure,” Connelly told TSN. “I’m happy with how I played and it’s nice to do it on a big stage like this. I take nothing but positives away from it.”

As for Spieth, he called winning the Claret Jug “absolutely a dream come true.”

For so much of Sunday, it felt like a recurring nightmare.

Just 15 months ago, Spieth lost a five-shot lead on the back nine at the Masters, coming undone with a quadruple-bogey on the 12th hole. It was more of a slow bleed at Royal Birkdale with three bogeys on the opening four holes and four putts inside eight feet that he missed on the front nine to fall into a tie with Kuchar.

And then it all fell apart — or so it seemed.

His tee shot in the rain on the par4 13th was so far right it sailed over the gallery, over the dunes behind them and was closer to the practice range than the fairway. When he finally found the ball, it was nestled in thick grass on a hill so steep Spieth could barely stand up.

Kuchar was 15 feet away for birdie, waiting on the green. Spieth appeared to be headed for a double bogey at best.

But the break of the tournament — and a moment that will rate alongside Seve Ballestero­s making birdie from the car park when he won at Royal Lytham & St Annes in 1979 — was when Spieth discovered the range was part of the course.

He took a one-shot penalty for an unplayable lie and took relief as far back as he wanted, onto the range, behind the equipment trucks. Then he received free relief from the trucks. That still left him a blind shot over the tall dunes to a fairway littered with pot bunkers.

His three-iron stopped just short of one of them in front of the green and he pitched over it to about seven feet and holed the putt to escape with a bogey.

Kuchar missed his birdie, but had the lead for the first time.

Spieth had momentum from his bogey and his six-iron on the par-3 14th hole landed in front of the flag and missed going in by inches. He made a four-footer for birdie to tie for the lead and then seized control with a 50-foot eagle putt on the 15th hole, looking at caddy Michael Greller filled with playful bravado and barking, “Go get that!”

Spieth said his caddy played a massive role in keeping his head in the game.

“I was getting down on myself, as I think anyone would,” Spieth said. “This is as much mine as it is his.”

Kuchar made birdie from the bunker on the 15th to stay one behind, but he had no answer when Spieth poured in a 30-foot birdie at the 16th. And after Kuchar rolled in a 20-foot birdie on the 17th to stay in the game, Spieth buried a seven-foot birdie on top of him to keep that two-shot lead going to the 18th.

The sequence left the crowd — the largest ever this week for a British Open in England — simply delirious. And they weren’t alone. “Is Jordan Spieth something else?” Jack Nicklaus tweeted.

Zach Johnson, Justin Thomas and Rickie Fowler were among those who waited by the 18th to watch Spieth capture yet another major. Johnson won at St Andrews two years ago, when Spieth missed the playoff by one shot in his bid for the calendar Grand Slam. Spieth drank wine from the jug that year, which he was told was bad luck for anyone wanting to possess the trophy one day.

Spieth put himself in hallowed territory just four days before his 24th birthday. He joined Nicklaus as the only players to win three different majors at age 23. Gene Sarazen, at 21 in 1923, was the only other player with three majors that young.

 ?? — AP PHOTO ?? Four days before his 24th birthday, Jordan Spieth kisses the Claret Jug after his victory at the British Open Sunday at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England.
— AP PHOTO Four days before his 24th birthday, Jordan Spieth kisses the Claret Jug after his victory at the British Open Sunday at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England.
 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Jordan Spieth hoists the Claret Jug on the 18th green at Royal Birkdale Sunday after winning the 146th Open Championsh­ip by three strokes over Matt Kuchar in Southport, England.
— GETTY IMAGES Jordan Spieth hoists the Claret Jug on the 18th green at Royal Birkdale Sunday after winning the 146th Open Championsh­ip by three strokes over Matt Kuchar in Southport, England.
 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canadian-American dual citizen Austin Connelly finished the tournament at 2 under, placing him in a tie for 14th place.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Canadian-American dual citizen Austin Connelly finished the tournament at 2 under, placing him in a tie for 14th place.

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