The Star Malaysia

Second ain’t so bad

Spieth is fine with runner-up finishes in FedEx Cup

-

CHICAGO: Jordan Spieth has said finishing runner-up over the next two weeks on the PGA Tour would suit him just fine.

The British Open champion is coming off two consecutiv­e runner-up finishes, after losing a playoff to Dustin Johnson at the Northern Trust and then falling to Justin Thomas at the Dell Championsh­ip.

He tops the standings in the season-long points race going into the final two events of the FedExCup playoffs, and a pair of second-placings would crown him champion and earn the US$10mil (RM42mil) bonus that goes with it, barring an unlikely set of circumstan­ces.

“On the PGA Tour I can’t call (finishing second) a bad thing,” 2015 FedExCup champion Spieth said ahead of the BMW Championsh­ip at Conway Farms outside Chicago.

“If I finish runner-up this week I will ( probably) accomplish the goal of being No. 1 going into East Lake.”

With three Major titles under his belt already at 24, he observed that he had a chance for a very special career.

“If I have the year I have this year the next 15 years, I’ll be the greatest player to ever play the game, if you judge it by Major championsh­ips,” he said.

Thomas, meanwhile, has a spring in his step, not only due to his laststart victory, but also because his south Florida home was not damaged by Hurricane Irma.

A five-time winner this season, he has found a level where only a bad short game or an off week with the putter prevents him from contending.

“I’m not making the stupid mis- takes the weeks I play well,” he said.

“I’ve been consistent­ly driving it better this year. I’m always going to be in contention if I’m chipping and putting well.”

Thomas had to vacate his home last week due to a mandatory evacuation of his Jupiter, Florida neighbourh­ood.

Before doing so, he transferre­d some valuables, including the PGA Championsh­ip Wanamaker Trophy, to a sturdy safe at his friend and rival Rickie Fowler’s house.

Thomas is second in the FedExCup standings, with world No. 1 Johnson third, followed by Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama and Spaniard Jon Rahm.

The top five heading into next week’s Tour Championsh­ip will control their own fate, meaning a victory at East Lake in Atlanta will also lock up the FedEx Cup.

Seventy players will compete in Lake Forest this week, with only 30 advancing to the Tour Championsh­ip. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Playing bridesmaid is ok: Jordan Spieth running to the 10th hole fairway during the pro-am of the BMW Championsh­ip at Conway Farms Golf Club on Wednesday. — AP
Playing bridesmaid is ok: Jordan Spieth running to the 10th hole fairway during the pro-am of the BMW Championsh­ip at Conway Farms Golf Club on Wednesday. — AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia