The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Spieth slowly gains some confidence

2015 winner struggled with game after battling mononucleo­sis in December.

- By Thomas Stinson

AUGUSTA — For all the reference material players stash on the way to the first tee — yardage book, pin placement sheet, IRS actuarial tables — Jordan Spieth is the only guy who could use a calendar too.

Ever since December and a bout with mononucleo­sis, Spieth has been sort of suspended in time, his game sometimes sensing it’s still February in California even though it’s April now at his favorite place in the world. And while he usually becomes a natural favorite at the Masters just by lacing up his spikes, this one feels a little different. Just a few weeks ago with his game in disarray, he was tossing around the word “panic.”

“It’s not been the greatest start to the year of any that I’ve had,” he said.

Spieth arrived in Augusta National coming off poor tournament­s before. In 2014 and 2016, he missed the cut at the Houston Open the previous week and then played his heart out the following week in runner-up Masters fifinishes both years. But he usually has won at least one event coming in. Not this year. His game has been so inconsiste­nt that when he actually popped up on the leaderboar­d at Houston last Sunday, he tried to pretend he held the lead, though he knew he was a few shots offff the pace.

“I kind of wanted that ‘you need to make this’ feeling,” he said. “It’s just been about just fifinding that setup that I had for a couple years that I kind of got a little stiffff and away from recently.”

That is, in part, a December residual. Spieth usually spends the last month of his off ff ff ff ff ff season on swing maintenanc­e in preparatio­n for the Hawaiian swing in January. But amono nucleosis diagnosis left himin bed for much of the month and though he has fully recovered, his game has labored to catch up. Until his third-place fifinish in Houston last week, Spie th had ping-p on g ed through his previous seven tournament­s, missing a couple cuts and fifinding the top 10 only once, that a ninth-place fifinish at the Genesis Open in Los Angeles.

Scoring was unpredicta­ble for one of the PGA Tour’s most predictabl­e players.

“It was just, I don’t shoot 5-over very often,” he said. “I shoot 5-over and you’re like, what the heck happened? And then when you get a few tournament­s in a row where it’s just ... for me, it was just what exactly am I doing? When I set my putter down and I look up and (it’s) not looking at the same place. Sometimes I get that for a day, sometimes it’s a couple weeks and then I was getting it for a couple months. It was kind of, what in the world is going on?”

In practice rounds this week, he has found something restorativ­e in Augusta National — “It’s kind of helped me settle in”— which might make the fifield take note. In his four Masters, he is an aggregate 26 shots under par. After finishing second- first- second in his first three tries, he slipped to 11th last year, though he was two strokes of the lead Sunday morning.

Still three months shy of his 25th birthday, Spieth’s connection with Augusta National is palpable, which may also buoy him as the week goes on. While the Masters instills reverence in almost all who play here, he has already defined himself by his Masters performanc­es.

“A place like this, he just loves this tournament,” said Justin Thomas, Spieth’s rival dating to junior golf. “All of us love this tournament but he really, really loves this tournament.”

The past couple weeks have given Spieth hope. His putting seems to have come around and he ranked fifirst in tee-to-green at Houston. But if this becomes the fifirst Masters where he fails to contend, he seems at peace with that too.

“I mean, if I don’t play well this week, well, I didn’t exactly have the lead into it that I was looking for every single year, going back to my rookie season, coming into here,” he said. “And that’s OK with me. It’s OK. I feel good about my game. I feel confifiden­t, I feel like I should have a chance towin this week.

“And that’s exciting tome. I made big strides in the last twoweeks, to get from kind of a panic place to a very calm, collected and confifiden­ce place. And it’s difficult to do in two weeks. Sometimes it takes years.”

Despite all that, Spieth began to wonder when someone asked about the possibilit­ies of a second green jacket, fantasizin­g about making space in his closet in Dallas.

“I think if you have a second and you some how walk away with one, it’s not as noticeable if you accidental­ly take it,” he said. “I think that’s where you can kind of have it at home. I think some of the older guys maybe ... sorry. I don’t think I can say that.”

But a guy can think it, right?

 ?? ANDREW REDINGTON / GETTY IMAGES ?? “I feel good about my game . ... I made big strides in the last two weeks, to get from kind of a panic place to a very calm, collected and confidence place,” says Jordan Spieth.
ANDREW REDINGTON / GETTY IMAGES “I feel good about my game . ... I made big strides in the last two weeks, to get from kind of a panic place to a very calm, collected and confidence place,” says Jordan Spieth.

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