Scottish Daily Mail

FURIOUS SPIETH IS LABELLED A SLOWCOACH

- DEREK LAWRENSON Golf Correspond­ent reports from Abu Dhabi

World No 1 Jordan Spieth handed out praise and brickbats in equal measure following his opening round of 68 in the Abu dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip yesterday.

He reserved the praise for his playing partner rory McIlroy, who shot 66 and delivered what Spieth rightly considered a ballstriki­ng clinic.

‘It was a masterclas­s, the rory that we have seen winning majors,’ raved the 22-year- old American. ‘He would have had a truly spectacula­r score on a very challengin­g golf course but for a couple of lip-outs. It was fun to watch. It’s inspiring when you’re playing with someone who’s hitting it that well.’

less inspiring and no fun was the ridiculous manner in which Spieth fell foul of the convoluted new rules the European Tour have instigated in an effort to speed up play.

Spieth picked up a bad time penalty after taking too long over a birdie putt at the par five 8th hole, his 17th of the day. He knew he was taking a while, but couldn’t see any harm given the e fact the group behindd had barely made it on to the tee.

Present those facts to practicall­y every golfer and they would declare: ‘Well, where is the problem inn taking a bit longer if you’ re not ca us iing anyone inconvenie­nce?’ e?’

I walked nine holes with the group and can declare categorica­lly they were not slow. Far from it. The only time they took a while was at the second hole, where rickie Fowler, the third member of the group, had to wait for a ruling.

Imagine the irritation for Spieth, therefore, when he walked to the ninth tee and was told about the bad time penalty. Just to rub salt in the wound, he had to wait to play his second shot to the 9th green while the group in front putted out.

‘It doesn’t make any sense to me,’ he said. ‘I read the putt from behind the hole, looked up and couldn’t see the group behind us at the tee box, so I called Michael (Greller, his caddie) over and said we’ve got time, let’s try to nail this, because we had been on the clock for a number of holes (after the Fowler ruling). ‘I understand the rule that if you are taking longer than the allotted time, you get a bad ttime. But it doesn’t make a whole lot of s e nse when our group had caught up, they were going tto take us off the clock, and the group coming up were 15 minutes behind us.’ European Tour chief referee John Paramor tried to put it down to transatlan­tic difference­s. He said: ‘Pace of play on this tour is measured by whether the group keeps to the starting interval between groups, rather than if they were on the same hole, as it is in America. Jordan was assessed a monitoring penalty after his putt on the 8th hole.’

This was less about cultural difference­s and more about the fact the monitoring penalty was lacking any common sense.

As McIlroy said: ‘It was a bit of a weird one to give Jordan a bad time when the group behind hadn’t even reached their drives. I feel the refs have to use a bit of common sense.’

It stuck i n Spieth’s craw because another bad time during this tournament and he will get a £2,200 fine.

It’s not the money, of course, but the reputation that comes with it which, in his case, would be wholly unfair.

‘ I’ve played a lot alongside Jordan and he is far from a slow player,’ said McIlroy, with feeling.

let’s applaud the tour for trying to do something about slow play, of course. But is there any chance of coming up with something that might actually identify the real culprits?

McIlroy’s six under par round left him two strokes off the pace set by US Amateur Champion Bryson deChambeau.

on a high- class leaderboar­d, desert specialist Henrik Stenson shot 65, while gifted South African Branden Grace stands alongside McIlroy on six under.

Englishmen Andy Sullivan and richard Bland shot 67s, while Scots pair russell Knox and Scott Jamieson finished the day on 70.

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Baffled: Spieth receives a bad time penalty in Abu Dhabi
GETTY IMAGES Baffled: Spieth receives a bad time penalty in Abu Dhabi
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