Austin American-Statesman

Spieth’s backward shot last week at Valero still being talked about

- Tim Schmitt

How insane was the line Jordan Spieth took during the final hole of Saturday’s third round at the Valero Texas Open?

It was still the talk of the tournament at Augusta National Golf Club this week, as the Texas Longhorns product prepared for the 2024 Masters.

After pulling his drive left through the fairway on the 618-yard par 5, Spieth’s second shot ended up near a drainage ditch in an area. It appeared like he’d punch the ball back into the fairway, but he then turned the opposite way and launched a wedge that found a gutter atop the TPC San Antonio clubhouse. The move had social media buzzing. Spieth wound up making doubleboge­y after three-putting and he said Sunday that he regretted his decisionma­king process.

“I should have just hit it left-handed out into the fairway,” Spieth explained. “I thought I could get it — I asked the rules official, he told me there’s no outof-bounds and that if you could get it up here and you know where it is, then you drop it by the scoreboard, which is better than if I were to hit it lefty up towards the fairway. So I tried. It didn’t come out very good and sure enough I was left with the same kind of situation on the next shot and then I did it. If I didn’t three-putt, I maybe felt like I would have saved a shot, but ultimately, I could have just re-teed and made a better score.

“It looks weird. I actually played a really, really solid tee-to-green golf course this week and of course highlighte­d by a weird hole yesterday that makes it look all crazy. But I was just asking questions and to be honest, if it was out of play here, I probably would have made a better score playing the normal route out. I thought I could finagle a stroke, saving a stroke out of it and it didn’t quite do so.”

The former Texas star rounded out the week with a 69, putting him into a tie for 10th place on the week at 6 under. He also finished the day with a birdie on 18, avoiding any gutters along the way.

“I feel like I came into the week unsure if I was confident in being able to win (at Augusta) and I think I come out of it saying I’ve got a couple things I’ve got to work on, but overall I think I’m in a good place to be able to have a chance,” he said. “Mission accomplish­ed in that sense, but I do wish that I didn’t kind of give away a few that I gave away.”

Scheffler’s time with caddie paid dividends

Before Scottie Scheffler’s Masters win in 2022, he had a chance meeting with legendary Augusta National Golf Club caddie Carl Jackson. The rest, as they say, is history.

“Well, I’m not going to expand too much on Carl’s secrets in front of people, but … No, it was maybe my second Masters, it was either my second or third,” Scheffler recalled. “I sat kind of in the back of the caddie house with Carl. And, yeah, he gave me a yardage book that had some of the — where he — I think he called it grain, where some of the slopes are. And it’s just a yardage book that has some arrows in it.”

Scheffler still studies the yardage book to this day.

“I’m not going to tell you where the arrows are pointing,” he said, laughing. “But it’s something that I’ll kind of review at night and I always look at it in the lead-up to the tournament just because there is kind of some weird stuff that goes on around the golf course. And, I mean, he’s such a peaceful guy. So, it was really nice just kind of listening to him talk about the golf course.”

Manor’s Terry takes Drive, Chip and Putt

Hogan. Crenshaw. Scheffler. Texas Terry.

On the 40th anniversar­y of Ben Crenshaw’s first Masters triumph, a fellow Austin product made history on Sunday at Augusta National. Competing in the 10-11 Boys Division, Texas Terry outlasted Georgia native Hudson Knapp by one point.

“I told Texas, ‘If you want to go to Augusta, you have to earn it,’” Jim Terry, Texas’ father, said. “I couldn’t be more proud of his work ethic and how much he’s accomplish­ed.”

Terry’s parents both attended Texas, while his mom, Coral, twirled for the Longhorns.

Texas was victorious in the chipping portion of the competitio­n, placed third in driving, and needed to lag his final putt to within one-foot, seven-inches to win the overall title.

Tim Schmitt is the managing editor for Golfweek, golf coordinato­r for the USA Today Network and lives in Round Rock. Will Cheney and Doug Stutsman contribute­d to this report.

 ?? ERIK WILLIAMS/USA TODAY ?? Jordan Spieth and his caddie walk down the fairway after teeing off on the first hole during the third round of the Valero Texas Open in San Antonio last weekend.
ERIK WILLIAMS/USA TODAY Jordan Spieth and his caddie walk down the fairway after teeing off on the first hole during the third round of the Valero Texas Open in San Antonio last weekend.

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