The Korea Times

Spieth ‘excited’ as FedEx Cup battle heats up

- CHICAGO (AFP)

— Two runner-up finishes in the U.S. PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup playoffs have only whetted Jordan Spieth’s appetite for a victory at this week’s BMW Championsh­ip.

The third leg of the playoffs tees off on Thursday at Conway Farms near Chicago.

His two second-place finishes in the first two legs of the four-tournament series have Spieth atop the playoff standings — with the series winner after the concluding Tour Championsh­ip lifting the FedEx Cup and its $10 million bonus.

“Very excited,” Spieth said on Wednesday. “I’m in a great position, looking to obviously stay in the num- ber one spot. The FedEx Cup is a tremendous accomplish­ment, something I’m certainly striving for.”

At 24, Spieth already has the 2015 FedEx Cup on his resume, along with three major titles — the most recent at this year’s British Open.

His friend and fellow 24-year-old Justin Thomas, who won his first major at the PGA Championsh­ip in August, beat Spieth to the Dell Championsh­ip title in Massachuse­ts two weeks ago and comes into Conway Farms second in the standings, 27 points behind Spieth.

World number one Dustin Johnson who beat Spieth in a playoff in the Northern Trust, the opening playoff event in August, admitted that tussling with the likes of Spieth and Thomas, not to mention 25-year-old Hideki Matsuyama and 22-year-old Spaniard Jon Rahm, can have him feeling all of his 33 years.

“I wouldn’t say I feel old, but yeah, I’m the oldest, for sure,” said Johnson, currently third in the Cup standings ahead of Matsuyama and Rahm.

“They’re really good players at a very early age,” Johnson said. “I like seeing it. The game needs it, and it pushes me to keep working harder. So I like it.”

Any player in the top five in the standings can claim the bonus with a victory in the Tour Championsh­ip — and only the top 30 players will advance to the season finale in Atlanta.

“I’ve won a major,” 2016 U.S. Open champion Johnson said. “I haven’t won the FedEx Cup. To me, they pretty much go hand-in-hand. It’s a big tournament where we get paid very, very well if we win. So it means a lot.”

This week’s tournament sees defending FedEx Cup champion Rory McIlroy fighting for his playoff life.

The Northern Ireland star, desperatel­y trying to salvage a season disrupted by injury, missed the cut at TPC Boston and is 51st in the standings.

Reigning Masters champion Sergio Garcia, currently 34th in the standings, needs an 18th-placed finish to advance, while a win would boost him into the top five in the standings.

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