The New Zealand Herald

Spieth keeping patience amid worst slump of his career

- Doug Ferguson

For a brief moment, Jordan Spieth had reason to believe he finally caught a good break with a bad shot.

He was trying to hit a hard, low draw on the fifth hole of the final round at Riviera into a strong wind and a light rain. Instead, it caught the heel of his 3-wood and spun out to the right, smacked off a tree and went further back next to a fence, just beyond a white out-of-bounds stake.

Good news: The rules official said the stake was left there by accident.

“He said, ‘That’s not supposed to be there.’ He literally picked up the white stake and said, ‘This isn’t ours’,” Spieth said. “So I got it out.” Bad news?

“I still made triple,” the American star said with a laugh.

Spieth can still find humour amid the worst slump of his career, or what amounts to a slump for a 25-year-old who already has 14 victories worldwide, including three legs of the career grand slam.

He picked up his third major in the 2017 British Open when he his tee shot caromed off a spectator’s head and into the dunes right of the 13th fairway at Royal Birkdale. He hit 3-wood after a penalty drop on the driving range, somehow escaped with bogey, and then went birdieeagl­e-birdie-birdie to win.

That was 37 tournament­s ago, and it’s starting to feel even longer.

Coming off the first winless year of his pro career, Spieth made a lastminute decision to play the Sony Open in Hawaii to shake off the rust from a busy offseason that included getting married. He missed the cut. Since then, he has opened with rounds of 65 at Torrey Pines, 66 at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and 64 at Riviera. He has yet to break par on the weekend.

His best result was a tie for 35th at Torrey.

The weekends have been an issue, and Spieth said as much after he finished his first round at Riviera.

“I got off to good starts my last couple of events and I need to continue to work hard to improve each day here instead of getting complacent and assuming my game is there,” he said. “It’s still not quite there tee-to-green.”

Two days later, he went into the final round in a tie for fourth, eight shots behind Justin Thomas. He shot 81.

The game is progressin­g.

The results — the ultimate measure in golf — are still a work in progress.

It’s one thing that Spieth is at No 24 in the world after starting 2018 at No 2. It’s another to realise he has played six tournament­s this season and is No 175 in the FedEx Cup standings.

In the last year, Spieth has had only three tournament­s where he started the final round within five shots of the lead or closer.

Is his patience being tested? “I don’t think so,” he said. “It’s something that comes with what I’m working on.”

He was more concerned last year when something was off in his game and he wasn’t quite sure what it was. “That’s not an easy feeling,” he said.

For five years, he did a lot right without really knowing why. And when it stopped, he had to figure it out.

Spieth pays little attention to any form of media, social or otherwise, and would prefer to keep it that way. He shared as much in Hawaii when he said, “I know what’s wrong with Jordan Spieth, and I know what’s right with Jordan Spieth. I know how to get where I want to go with my golf game and have fun doing it.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The weekends have been an issue for Jordan Spieth who is finding some humour in the worst slump of his career.
Photo / AP The weekends have been an issue for Jordan Spieth who is finding some humour in the worst slump of his career.

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