Showing posts with label Luke List (golfer). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luke List (golfer). Show all posts

Friday, 11 March 2016

Spieth Paints Bleak Picture at Valspar

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Jordan Spieth is in danger of missing his second cut this year after carding an opening-round five-over-par 76 at the Valspar Championship in Florida.

The American, 22, is nine shots behind American joint leaders Keegan Bradley, Ken Duke and Charles Howell III.

Spieth, who will defend his Masters title in April, also missed the cut at the Northern Trust Open in February.

The defending champion never recovered from making five bogeys and a birdie in the first seven holes.

Typically, my history (on my off days), I'm able to hold that around even par and I'm just shooting too high a number," Spieth said. "(I) didn't quite squeak out even today, even though it was an even kind of round, and hopefully less wind tomorrow and I can work hard to play on the weekend."

"I just didn't hit enough greens," Spieth said. "I had the opportunities on a few holes today and actually there was a lot of holes where I thought if I hit great shots posing and it's 10, 15 yards off on the distance based on the gust of the wind.

"It was a very tough day."

"I got off to a poor start and I was behind the eight-ball with gusty wind on a tough golf course," said Spieth, who found himself getting tentative after repeatedly flying greens.

"It's so tough on some of these putts down the hill to hit them as hard as we have to hit them," Spieth explained. "... You don't see it. It's an adjustment. It's something you got to trust. It's one thing to practice on the greens and get used to it, it's another to actually do it.

"What good is kicking the door other than hurting my foot and (having to) withdraw?," Spieth said good-naturedly. "I'm kidding. No, I'll be fine."


Friday, 19 February 2016

Spieth Struggles at Northern Trust

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Jordan Spieth refused to write off his chances of winning the Northern Trust Open despite carding the worst opening round of his career at Riviera Country Club.

Spieth carded eight bogeys and a double bogey in an eight-over-par 79 which left him joint 142nd in the 144-man field, 16 shots behind leader Camilo Villegas. But having started the season by shooting 30 under par to win the Tournament of Champions by eight shots, the 22-year-old was not about to give up on an eighth PGA Tour title just yet.

“I felt like there was a couple rounds last week [in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am] where I shot two under and I was more miserable than I was today,” said Spieth, who shot 82 in the Memorial Tournament in 2013 and 80 in the Tour Championship in 2014.

“It’s just a day to forget. It’s one in, hopefully, every couple of years. I’ve shot in the 80s a couple times on tour. In the course of a career I imagine it’s going to happen. Just unfortunate when it actually does.

“It’s amazing. I feel really confident about where my game is and had a great range session. Cameron [McCormick, his coach] is here and there was nothing pinpointed that was wrong. I just played really poorly from good positions off the tee and didn’t strike the iron shots bad either. I just overdrew it when you can’t be left and I overcut it when you can’t be right. Just bad timing.”

Overnight rain had left the course playing much softer than usual and Spieth admitted he struggled to adapt to the unfamiliar conditions.

“I found it very difficult to trust the way the golf course is playing and I didn’t get off to a good start because of that,” the Masters and US Open champion added.

“I’ve never played the golf course soft. I’ve always played where you have to kind of float it on to the front of the greens and let it bounce and I just never trusted the adjustment.

“Again, it’s just a day to forget and I won’t think much on it. I’m not throwing this tournament away. I believe that I can shoot 10 under par on this golf course. There’s a nine under round right now [Villegas bogeyed his final hole] and I think I can do that. I’m not packing it in by any means.

The good news for Spieth is that he responded well to each of his scores in the 80s, shooting 68 and 71 in the final rounds of the Memorial Tournament and Tour Championship respectively.