Jordan Spieth’s recent form hints at a major comeback, but he’s still chasing a first win since 2017

5:00 Jordan Spieth’s long wait for another win goes on after a disappointing final day at Pebble Beach, but he vowed to continue his recent resurgence at Riviera next week.

More importantly, he’s showing progress and feeling confident that he’s on the proper path. With the PGA Tour schedule entering its big stretch of championships starting with The Players Championship in March, it no longer appears to be a question of whether Spieth will make noise, but just how much he’ll make each week.

“As long as I’m trusting what I’m doing, I know I’m moving in the right direction,” Spieth said. “That’s just the head space that I’ve wanted to get into – and for a while now.”

A while, indeed. When Spieth won at Royal Birkdale in 2017 in a drama-packed final round, it was his third win of the year and 14th of his Tour career. He added a couple of runner-up finishes during the FedExCup Playoffs and seemed poised for a spectacular 2017-18 season.

But after a Sunday 64 at the 2018 Masters that nearly fuelled an improbable rally from nine shots down – he eventually finished third, two shots behind Patrick Reed – Spieth failed to build on the momentum. In truth, he went the opposite way. He produced just one top-10 finish in his final 13 starts of the season and did not qualify for the Tour Championship. It was his first winless season on Tour.

1:54 Jordan Spieth jumped back into a share of the lead at Pebble Beach in some style at the 16th, where a big draw from 160 yards found the hole for an amazing eagle-two.

The 2018-19 season was equally unrewarding, with just one top-five finish in 23 starts. Again, no Tour Championship. And the 2019-20 season was even less fulfilling; he opened the season with a T8 at the CJ Cup, and could never match that in his ensuing 16 starts. He made the FedExCup Playoffs but was bounced after two rounds. And he was not selected for the 2019 Presidents Cup, the first time as a pro that he did not represent the US Team.

So what happened?

“There were a number of things that I got off on mechanically,” Spieth explained. “It was very frustrating because I felt just as competitive and felt the same; still the same me. I just would take the club back and feel lost.”

The numbers bear it out. In his last winning season of 2017, he ranked second in Strokes Gained: Tee-to-Green. The next season, he fell to 23rd. Then 157th in 2019 before moving back inside the top 100 (90th) last season.

Meanwhile, his putting was all over the map. In 2018, he was 123rd in Strokes Gained: Putting. The next season, he ranked second. Last season, he ranked 105th. In essence, he couldn’t count on the flat stick to save him.

For a player who wears his emotions on his sleeve, he definitely looked lost. Golf fans suffered right along with him. It was difficult to see him struggle.

“First time in my life where I’ve had a significant dip in success,” Spieth said. “It had kind of been a nice uptick every single year. So just kind of learning how to deal with that and doing it – and having to do it in such a public way was very difficult, can sometimes present even more challenges.

“But at the same time, the idea is to get to the bottom of it, turn it around, make progress every day and recognise that’s the past. I can use it as having scar tissue and use it to my advantage going forward.”

People wanted to help, but Spieth was determined to figure it out on his own, along with the help of swing coach Cameron McCormick. Everybody else was tuned out – with the exception of Butch Harmon, who offered some feedback at Spieth’s request.

“He asked if I could come over and take a look at what he and Cam were working on,” Harmon explained during an interview with PGA Tour Radio. “I agreed with most of the stuff they were working on. I thought I was going to have to change his clubface at the top of the swing – you know how open that gets because he has a very weak left-hand grip – but they had worked beautifully on that. I didn’t think he was turning enough, if you don’t wind stuff up, you can’t unwind it.”

Said Spieth: “I was probably too stubborn and waited too long to probably reach out to people that I definitely could have for just help, whether it’s certain areas of the game or just getting through down years or something like that.”

Spieth kept working but his first start this season was a missed cut at the Farmers Insurance Open. He dropped to 92nd in the world, his worst ranking since his first Tour win at the 2013 John Deere Classic moved him to 59th as a 19-year-old. From that perspective, it was his low point. Even Spieth admitted he “was not in a great head space”.

And yet, a week later, he shot 61 and found himself in the heat of battle. Golf is funny like that. Something can just click after years of frustration. Spieth might have the best explanation – if you hit “tens of thousands of golf balls the wrong way, it takes about that many to get stuff back”.

“Did some really phenomenal work from Sunday through Wednesday, that was probably the best period of a few days of work that I’ve put in in a long time,” Spieth said about the days leading up to the Phoenix Open. “It just got me believing in what I was doing and progressing forward.”

The road back has taken longer than expected for the former world No 1, and he’s not all the way there yet. Winning remains the ultimate objective, and not just one win, but multiple wins – and on the biggest stages.

For now, though, Spieth is feeling confident about the future. That might be the most important thing when wondering if he’s back.

“It gets me really excited about playing golf – and for me, that makes me happy,” he said. “It’s nice to be going to bed wanting to do what you love to do and you get to go do it. Can’t take that for granted and I’m glad to be on this side of it right now.”

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March 4, 2021, 12:00pm

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