The Commercial Appeal

Spieth’s collapse overshadow­s Willett’s strong finish

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AUGUSTA, Ga. — A big deficit. A collapse that was painful to watch. An Englishman in a green jacket who might not get his due.

Nick Faldo has seen this all before.

On Sunday, it was Danny Willett who hit the right shots to win the Masters.

“We all go out there and try and play good golf, and at the end of the day, someone has got to win the golf tournament,” Willett said in Butler Cabin as Jordan Spieth, his face still awash in shock, looked on. “And, fortunatel­y enough, today was my day.”

Just like 20 years ago, when Faldo won at Greg Norman’s expense, this Masters might be remembered more for the way it was lost than how it was won.

Even as Willett stood on the 18th green in his green jacket, he couldn’t help but tell Spieth, “I feel very fortunate to be standing here, and you not putting the jacket on yourself again.”

This was Spieth’s to lose, and he did just that in matter of three holes.

Staked to a five-shot lead going to the back nine, Spieth found a bunker at No. 10 and made bogey. He hit into the trees right of the 11th fairway that led to another bogey.

And then one swing changed everything. Spieth chose to fade a 9-iron toward the right pin on the par-3 12th and came up short and into the water. Going to the drop zone for an awkward distance, he hit his wedge so fat that it found the water again. The quadruple-bogey 7 put him This year’s Masters may be remembered more for Jordan Spieth’s disastrous three holes where he lost a five-shot lead, but Danny Willett (left) earned the win with a bogey-free 67. three shots behind.

Those are the shots for which this Masters will be remembered, at least in the immediate future. The images are not Willett clenching his fist when he made three birdies on the last six holes, but Spieth hanging his head as a five-shot lead turned into a three-shot deficit.

Two weeks ago, Faldo was reminiscin­g about his six-shot comeback to beat Norman in 1996. Everyone remembers the short putts the Shark missed, the tee shot into the water on No. 12 that cost him the lead, and the 78 on his card. Faldo thinks more about the fact he shot 67 — the same score as Willett on Sunday — that was the lowest on the weekend.

Willett had a bogey-free 67 that matched the lowest score on the weekend this year.

He started the final round only three shots behind, tied with Jason Day, the No. 1 player in the world, and Dustin Johnson. The other three players ahead of him couldn’t sustain the round of golf that Willett put together.

Yes, Spieth lost it. But someone had to win it.

“I just feel fortunate that I was in the position that I was able to pounce on the opportunit­y,” Willett said. “If I had been 5 over par, then it wouldn’t have mattered what Jordan had done. Fortunatel­y, I was in a position where we were in second place, playing quite nicely, and as a result of him doing what he did, we were able to stay at the lead.”

The victory was a surprise only in the way it unfolded, not the name on the trophy.

Willett was the No. 1 amateur in the world nearly a decade ago. What slowed his arrival were back problems, which he described as a step below a stress fracture. He had to withdraw from about a half-dozen tournament­s a year until he could get it sorted out by changing his swing and sticking to exercises that kept it loose.

He has shown up on big stages in recent years. Willett reached the semifinals of the Match Play at Harding Park. He won in Dubai this year, and finished two shots behind Adam Scott at Doral in another World Golf Championsh­ip.

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BRANT SANDERLIN/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS
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