Cape Times

Spieth stumbles after ‘brain fart’

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CARNOUSTIE: They say the key to a good score here is to make your birdies on the first 14 holes then hang on.

Defending champion Jordan Spieth managed the first part yesterday but failed miserably with the second, leaking four shots in his final four holes to slide back into the pack with a disappoint­ing oneover 72.

Two birdies in his opening four holes offered early promise for the American but even with fickle Scottish weather in relatively benevolent mood he discovered the sprawling old course still packs a punch.

The 24-year-old doubleboge­yed the par-four 15th after suffering what he described as a “brain fart”, bogeyed the par-three 16th and then leaked another shot on the last after driving his tee shot into Barry Burn.

“Felt like a missed opportunit­y,” three-time major champion Spieth said.

“I felt like I was really going well. I was putting the ball where I needed to. It was a clean round of golf, just the decision-making that’s cost me.

“But the misses towards the end were the exact misses that I’ve been having and I’m working away from. My swing just didn’t quite hold up to the end of my round.”

It all began to go wrong on the 15th where he played conservati­vely off the tee and then hit his second shot into the face of a deep bunker, giving him an impossible shot.

He could only play out sideways and ended up with a six.

“I just had a brain fart, and I missed it into the location where there was the only pot bunker where I could actually get in trouble, and it plugged deep into it,” he said.

“It was a really, really poor decision on the second shot, and that cost me.”

Spieth and playing partner Justin Rose found themselves six strokes behind Kevin Kisner who was leading into the early evening, but the champion still felt it was a recoverabl­e position.

“I imagine this is as easy as the course could play. So I don’t see the winning score being any better than it was in 2007 (seven-under) with tomorrow’s forecasted tough conditions and Sunday’s forecasted heavy winds,” he said.

Asked what score could win the title on Sunday, Spieth said it was impossible to predict.

“Five-under could win it, five-over could win it. 15-under could win it,” he said. – Reuters

 ??  ?? JORDAN SPIETH: Title defence starts with a 72
JORDAN SPIETH: Title defence starts with a 72

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