Business Day

Career not defined by a few bad years, says Spieth

- Agency Staff Pebble Beach

Jordan Spieth has not lifted a trophy since the 2017 British Open and has drifted to 21st in the world rankings but the Texan says he would have had a good career even if he never wins again and that he will not go chasing results.

The former world No 1 triumphed 11 times on the PGA Tour before turning 24 but is coming off the first disappoint­ing year of his career.

He has seemed out of sorts since a poor final round at the 2018 British Open at Carnoustie, where he shared the lead starting on Sunday before fading to a tie for ninth.

Spieth returns this week to Pebble Beach, where he won two years ago, for the PGA Tour’s Pebble Beach Pro-Am that is played on three courses on the Monterey Peninsula in northern California.

“Your career is not defined by a couple of bad years and I could have really poor years the rest of my career and still have a pretty fantastic career,” Spieth told reporters on Wednesday. “If I think about it that way it certainly makes me happier, frees me up a bit.”

Pebble Beach will also host the US Open in June when the course is likely to be much drier than the damp, lush conditions that will greet players this week.

Spieth is part of a field that includes world No3 Dustin Johnson, who won the European Tour’s Saudi Internatio­nal on Sunday.

Whether or not this is the week Spieth finds the missing ingredient, he thinks his game is moving in the right direction.

“Sometimes that means results are coming soon, sometimes they’re coming later, but they’re coming,” he added. “I’m not going to chase them as hard as last year because you can get hurt doing that, you can get into some bad patterns.” Reuters

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