Dayton Daily News

Spieth’s rise to No. 1 consolatio­n in defeat

- By Eddie Pells

In SHEBOYGAN, WIS.— 2010, Jordan Spieth gave Jason Day a thumbs-up as he watched Day’s long birdie attempt roll tantalizin­gly close to the 17th hole at the PGA Championsh­ip.

No way Spieth was going to beat him. Might as well tip his cap.

Spieth closed out one of the best ever performanc­es at a major championsh­ip Sunday — 17-under 271 — to finish one of the best ever seasons at the majors.

But he finished second in this one, and in the final round, he never really put a scare into Day.

“Best I’ve ever seen him play,” Spieth said.

Spieth started the day trailing Day by two and ended up losing by three. Day shot 20 under — the best in major history.

Only three players other than Day have ever shot lower than 17 under in a major: Tiger Woods, Bob May and Nick Faldo. That’s Spieth’s consolatio­n. And really, he had plenty of that as he left Whistling Straits.

His cumulative score of 54 under par in the season’s four majors breaks a record previously held by Woods during his three-win major season of 2000.

Spieth has two major championsh­ips, a second place here and a fourthplac­e at the British Open, where he was one shot out of a playoff.

He vaulted ahead of Rory McIlroy for the top spot in the ranking.

“Easy a loss as I’ve ever had,” Spieth said. “Because I felt that I not only couldn’t do much about it ... but I also accomplish­ed one of my life-long goals in the sport of golf. I’ll always be a No. 1 player in the world.”

He’ll be the 18th player, and fifth American, to reach No. 1 since the world ranking began in 1986. The last American other than Tiger to hold the spot: David Duval in 1999.

What Spieth doesn’t have yet is the Wanamaker Trophy.

He just missed in his quest to join Woods and Ben Hogan as only the third player to win three majors in a season. He would’ve been the first to sweep all three majors on U.S. soil.

Could he have made a few more putts? Probably. Early on the back nine, he had two birdie tries inside of 10 feet that just curled out.

Could he have driven more accurately? Sure. He hit nine of 14 fairways and ranked a middling 31st for the week.

Could he have changed the result? Probably not, and he knew it.

“It would have been hard to shoot 8 under and go 15 under for the weekend,” said Spieth, who worked his way into the mix by shooting 30 on the back nine Saturday. “That’s very hard to do at a major championsh­ip.”

Spieth’s last, best chance to put a scare into Day came on No. 14, when he drove into the middle of the fairway and Day found a bunker. Five minutes later, Spieth had to make a magical up-and-down to save par and Day sank an 8-foot putt for birdie to go up four.

“He played like he had won seven or eight majors before,” Spieth said. “There was a pep in his step and it was going to be his day.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Jordan Spieth’s 17-under totalwould have been good enough to win at most majors but earned only a runner-up finish. He still became No. 1 in theworld ranking.
GETTY IMAGES Jordan Spieth’s 17-under totalwould have been good enough to win at most majors but earned only a runner-up finish. He still became No. 1 in theworld ranking.

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