The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Pressure is getting to Spieth in spades

American losing his touch on the greens

- From Derek Lawrenson

THE first time Jordan Spieth competed in the Players Championsh­ip in 2014 he went 59 holes before registerin­g a bogey, on his way to finishing fourth.

On Friday, he missed his third successive halfway cut in the event, the only player in the world’s top 15 not to make it to the weekend.

The likeable Texan left the premises saying his ball-striking was phenomenal, which is one way of describing statistics that showed him 80th in driving distance and 108th in driving accuracy but not one that makes any sense.

Like his record in the PGA Tour’s flagship event, Spieth began his profession­al career at an electrifyi­ng pace, winning majors back-to-back and being classed in the same bracket as Tiger Woods.

But there was never the wow factor present when watching Rory McIlroy when the Irishman began, or exciting young Spainiard Jon Rahm (right) now.

You always wondered what would happen when Spieth stopped making every 30-footer he looked at.

Following his collapse on the final day of the Masters last month for the second successive year and his record here in the socalled fifth major, perhaps we’re finding out.

This is not to say we’ve reached anything like the position of ‘whatever happened to Jordan Spieth.’

He’s still in the world’s top five, which is some place to be at the age of just 23.

But it’s going to be interestin­g to see if he can stay there when he’s not in the same league as every other player in the top eight when it comes to driving.

Everyone else is long from the tee, several are super-long and at least a couple in Dustin Johnson and McIlroy are super-long and unnervingl­y accurate.

How can you take them on when you’re 30 yards behind and invariably playing from the rough?

If truth be told, it would be good if Spieth could show there remains a different way to compete every week, as Luke Donald did when he reached the summit and stayed there for a year.

But it’s so much harder to be brilliant all the time on and around the greens than it is to demolish courses with length.

When he won the Masters and the US Open in 2015, we all marvelled at Spieth’s brilliant mind.

Now it’s Spieth who’s looking enviously at the laidback, deceptivel­y casual approach of Johnson. During Thursday’s opening round, Spieth was so incensed at a lie he found in a bunker he took a photo on his smartphone to show to officials. Could you imagine Johnson reacting like that? So much for playing the ball as it lies and accepting the slings and arrows with equal grace. This was a man feeling the pressure. It showed again at the island green 17th hole on Friday, where Spieth needed to finish with two pars to make the cut. But his tee shot never came close to remaining on the putting surface, tumbling into the water for a ruinous double bogey. At the last, with nothing to play for, he stood over a 30ft putt and casually knocked it for a birdie. He can still do it when he’s playing freely, then.

Spieth has got a couple of events now in his home state where he will look to regain some momentum before the US Open next month.

He’s going to continue to win events, of course, and probably even the odd major. But regaining the world No1 spot?

It’s hard to see that happening without him figuring out something extraordin­ary with his driving.

As for the Players, Ian Poulter, who got a last-minute reprieve into the event, made the most of his good fortune to reach five under for 36 holes, just four shots behind the joint leaders, former Open Champion Louis Oosthuizen and American Kyle Stanley.

Rahm and Paul Casey were a further shot adrift with McIlroy and Johnson nine back.

As the third round got underway, Masters champion Sergio Garcia made huge strides through the field, carding a fine five-under 67 to move into the top ten. American Pat Perez shot a sizzling 66 to move to four under.

 ??  ?? FALLING SHORT: Spieth is struggling around the greens
FALLING SHORT: Spieth is struggling around the greens
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