Daily Dispatch

Spieth is sick to the gut over talk of big loss

- By JAMES CORRIGAN

RORY McIlroy has warned Jordan Spieth that he will have to bury his Augusta demons in public if he does not want them to monopolise his future Masters buildups.

The Ulsterman was responding to Spieth’s comment here on Monday that he cannot wait for this year’s Masters to be over because he is sick of people asking him about 12 months ago, when he blew a fourshot lead with a meltdown that was triggered by putting two balls in the water on the famous par-three 12th.

“No matter what happens at this year’s Masters, whether I can grab the jacket back or I miss the cut, it will be nice having this Masters go by,” said Spieth.

“The Masters lives on for a year. It brings a non-golf audience into golf. And it will be nice once this year’s finished, to be brutally honest with you.”

His negative thoughts will be a surprise to many, as Spieth has played in three Masters and holds the remarkable record of two seconds and a first. But the ongoing inquest has plainly irked the 23year-old.

“It would be best if I could reclaim the jacket,” said Spieth. “But I believe that I’ll be back up there sooner or later, with the success I’ve had and the comfort level I have there. Whether it happens this year or not, it will just be nice [when it’s over].”

Spieth believes there will be no ghosts to exorcise, not even at the par-three 12th, where it all came crashing down, allowing England’s Danny Willett to win. Spieth played Augusta in December and birdied the revered 155-yarder named Golden Bell twice.

“I was vocally expressing that, saying to my playing partners, ‘Guys, we have some demons to get rid of here, I’d appreciate if y’all stood to the side of the tee box while I do my work’,” said Spieth. “I was very nervous but I hit an eight-iron over the bunker to about 15 feet. I was pumped and then I hit my putt and it just about fell in for two. I gave like a big fist pump.

“And I went back the next day and hit a nine-iron and it almost went in, right on the lip. So, the two times I played the hole, I made birdie.

“And we won in Colonial three starts later [after the Masters]. So as far as affecting me on course when I’m in a tournament, I think that answer is clear. But as far as just having all the questions be done, I’m pretty sure they will be.”

McIlroy is not so sure, and speaks with painful experience regarding the length of people’s Masters memories. Six years on from conceding his own four-shot advantage in the final round, McIlroy is still seeking to change the conversati­on.

“It’s not as if it’s going to be the last year Jordan gets questions about it,” said McIlroy. “That might be the way he’s approachin­g it, the mentality of ‘I just can’t wait for this to be over so all the questions are’. But if he doesn’t banish those demons or win this year, the questions will always still be there.

“I sympathise. The guy had a chance to win the Green Jacket and didn’t. But he can console himself by opening up his wardrobe and seeing one hanging there. It’s a little bit different to me. No matter what happens this year, those questions will still be there.”

The WGC Matchplay, which teed off at the Austin Country Club yesterday, is McIlroy’s last event before the season’s first major and, after his fourth place at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al, the world number two is one of the favourites for a title he lifted two years ago. — The Daily Telegraph

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