The Philippine Star

MASTERS SHOCKER

Willet cops first major as Spieth falls apart

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AUGUSTA, Georgia – Jordan Spieth couldn’t bear to watch, turning his head before another shot splashed into Rae’s Creek. Moments later, Danny Willett looked up at the large leaderboar­d at the 15th green and couldn’t believe what he saw.

This Masters turned into a shocker Sunday, right down to the green jacket ceremony.

Spieth was in Butler Cabin, just like everyone expected when he took a fiveshot lead to the back nine at Augusta National. Only he was there to present it to Willett, who seized on Spieth’s collapse with a magnificen­t round that made him a Masters champion.

“You dream about these kind of days and things like that, but for them to happen ... it’s still mind-boggling,” Willett said.

It was a nightmare for Spieth, especially the par-3 12th hole. Clinging to a one-shot lead, he put two shots into the water and made a quadruple-bogey 7, falling three shots behind and never catching up. Instead of making history with another wire-to-wire victory, he joined a sad list of players who threw the Masters away.

“Big picture? This one will hurt,” Spieth said.

It was a comeback that ranks among the most unlikely in the 80 years of the Masters on so many levels.

Willett wasn’t even sure he would play this year because his wife was due – on Sunday, no less – with their first child. She gave birth to Zachariah James on March 30, sending him on his amazing journey to his first major.

“We talk about fate, talk about everything else that goes with it,” Willett said. “It’s just a crazy, crazy week.”

He became the first player from England in a green jacket since Nick Faldo in 1996, and the parallels are bizarre. Faldo shot a five- under 67 and overcame a six- shot deficit when Greg Norman collapsed around Amen Corner. Willett also closed with a 67, with no bogeys on his card, to match the best score of the weekend.

The most compelling images came from the guy who suffered.

Coming off two straight bogeys to start the back nine, Spieth still had the lead when he went at the flag with a 9-iron on the par-3 12th and saw it bounce off the slope into the water. From the drop zone, he hit a wedge so fat that he turned his head and removed his cap, not wanting to look. He got up-and-down from the back bunker, and suddenly faced a threeshot deficit.

“I actually heard everyone grunting and moaning or whatever they do to the scoreboard when the scores go up,” Willett said. “He obviously had a terrible run, which basically put it right back in anyone’s hands. And fortunatel­y enough, I was able to seize the opportunit­ies.”

He finished at five-under 283 for a three-shot victory over Spieth and Lee Westwood (69).

Spieth was trying to become only the fourth back-to-back winner of the Masters, and the first player in 156 years of championsh­ip golf to go wire-to-wire in successive years in a major. And it looked inevitable when he ran off four straight birdies to end the front nine and build a five-shot lead.

 ?? AFP ?? England’s Danny Willett flashes the thumbsup sign as he wears the Green Jacket after winning the US Masters in Augusta, Georgia.
AFP England’s Danny Willett flashes the thumbsup sign as he wears the Green Jacket after winning the US Masters in Augusta, Georgia.

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