Jordan Spieth

Golfer

Jordan Spieth was born in Dallas, Texas, United States on July 27th, 1993 and is the Golfer. At the age of 30, Jordan Spieth biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

  Report
Other Names / Nick Names
Jordan Alexander Spieth, Jordan
Date of Birth
July 27, 1993
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Dallas, Texas, United States
Age
30 years old
Zodiac Sign
Leo
Profession
Golfer
Social Media
Jordan Spieth Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 30 years old, Jordan Spieth has this physical status:

Height
185cm
Weight
80kg
Hair Color
Blonde (Natural)
Eye Color
Blue
Build
Athletic
Measurements
Not Available
Jordan Spieth Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Christianity
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
St. Monica Catholica School, Jesuit College Preparatory School
Jordan Spieth Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Annie Verret
Children
1
Dating / Affair
Annie Verret (2014-Present)
Parents
Shawn Spieth, Mary Christine Spieth
Siblings
Steven Spieth (Younger Brother) (Professional Basketball Player), Ellie Spieth (Younger Sister)
Other Family
Donald Edward Spieth (Paternal Grandfather), Edward Spieth (Great-Grandfather), Patricia Ann Yochum (Paternal Grandmother), Robert Julius (Maternal Grandfather), and Virginia Marie Pieper (Maternal Grandmother)
Jordan Spieth Life

Jordan Alexander Spieth (born July 27, 1993) is an American professional golfer and former world number one in the Official World Golf Rankings.

He is a three-time major winner and a 2015 FedEx Cup champion.

Spieth was selected to Time magazine's list of the 100 Most Influential People" in April 2016, adding that he "exemplifies everything that is awesome about sports." Spieth's first major victory came in the 2015 Masters Tournament, when he shot a 270 (-18) and pocketed $1.8 million.

He tied the 72-hole record set by Tiger Woods in 1997 and became the second youngest golfer (behind Woods) to win the Masters for the second time.

He then won the 2015 U.S. Open with a score of 5-under-par.

In 1923, he became the youngest U.S. Open champion after amateur Bobby Jones.

He won the 2015 Tour Championship, which clinched the 2015 FedEx Cup.

Spieth won his third major at the 2017 Open Championship by three shots at 12 under par.

Early life

Spieth was born in Dallas, Texas, to Shawn Spieth and Mary Christine Spieth (née Julius) Spieth. He attended St. Monica Catholic School and graduated from Jesuit College Preparatory School in 2011. He learned to play golf at Brookhaven Country Club.

Personal life

Spieth is the son of Shawn and Christine Spieth, both Pennsylvania natives.

Donald Spieth, his grandfather, was a music teacher at Moravian College and Northampton Community College in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where he served as a long-serve of the former Lehigh Valley Chamber Orchestra for many years. Steven and Ellie, Jordan's younger siblings, are brothers and sisters. Steven played basketball and was a member of the Dallas Mavericks' 2017 NBA Summer League team. Ellie has grown up with disabilities, and Jordan has credited her with "keeping him grounded and focused as well as keeping the game of golf in perspective."

Spieth revealed his engagement to Annie Vert, his longtime girlfriend, on January 2, 2018. In Dallas, the two couples married in November 2018. Spieth and his wife were expecting their first child in November 2021 on September 3, 2021. Sammy Spieth's son was born on November 14, 2021.

Spieth is Catholic. He is a member of the PGA Bible Study.

Source

Jordan Spieth Career

Amateur career

Spieth won the U.S. National Bedminster in 2009 and 2011 at Gold Peak. The tournament's only two-time champions are junior Amateur and Tiger Woods.

He was No. 111 before turning 18 in July 2011. The AJGA Golf Rankings, which recognizes the best junior golfers in the country, rank number 1 in the AJGA Golf Rankings.

In the 2008 and 2009 Junior PGA Championships, he came in second place. In 2009, the American Junior Golf Association named him the Rolex Junior Player of the Year.

In 2010, Spieth was given an exemption to participate in the PGA Tour's HP Byron Nelson Championship. This was the first amateur exemption since 1995. Trip Kuehne, Justin Leonard, and Woods were among the tournament's previous exemptions. He made the cut, becoming the sixth-youngest player to make the cut at a PGA Tour stop. After the third round, Spieth tied for seventh place in the tournament, finishing in a tie for 16th place. When he made the cut and finished in a tie for 32nd, he was given another exemption to the tournament in 2011.

Spieth played college golf at the University of Texas. Spieth was a member of the 2011 Walker Cup team and competed in three of the four rounds; he halved his foursomes match and won both singles matches.

Spieth earned three tournaments and led the team in scoring average in his freshman year at Texas. He helped his team win the NCAA championship and was named to the All-Big 12 Team, Big 12 Freshman of the Year, and Player of the Year, as well as a first-team All-American.

After Brandt Snedeker withdrew from the tournament, he finished second in 2012 and was the lowest amateur. After his success in the U.S. Open and Patrick Cantlay's decision to turn professional, he became the number one amateur in the World Amateur Golf Ranking.

Professional career

In 2012, 19-year-old Spieth converted to a professional midway through his sophomore year in Texas after failing to advance to the Final Stage of PGA Tour qualifying school. In January 2013, he worked with Under Armour for sponsorship and then with BioSteel Sports Supplements in March.

Spieth debuted in his first tournament in January, but he missed the cut by two strokes at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. Spieth made three cuts in March, placing second in second place at the Puerto Rico Open and tied for seventh at the Tampa Bay Championships. In March, he was granted special Temporary Member status, which gave him unlimited sponsorship exemptions; non-members were restricted to seven exemptions per season. In April, he achieved his second top-ten finish at the RBC Heritage, a tie for ninth.

Spieth won the John Deere Classic on the fifth hole of a three-way, sudden-death playoff against defending champion Zach Johnson and David Hearn on July 14 (about two weeks before his 20th birthday) on July 14. He was the fourth youngest PGA Tour champion and the first teenager to do so after Ralph Guldahl won the Santa Monica Open in 1931. On the 72nd hole, Spieth holed out from a greenside bunker to make the playoffs.

Spieth was granted full status as a PGA Tour participant and became eligible for the FedEx Cup, ranking in 11th place in the standings after winning in 11th position. Since winning him entry into the 2013 Open Championship, PGA Championship, and 2014 Masters, he also qualified him for the next three majors: the 2013 Open Championship, PGA Championship, and the 2014 Masters. Spieth appeared in the Wyndham Championship, where he lost in a playoff to Patrick Reed five weeks after his first victory.

Spieth finished second in the Deutsche Bank Championship with a 62, putting him in a tie for fourth. Captain Fred Couples selected Spieth for the United States squad in the 2013 Presidents Cup just two days later. He was named PGA Tour Rookie of the Year on September 27, 2013. He was ranked 10th on the PGA Tour money list and 22nd in the Official World Golf Rankings at the end of the 2013 season.

In April, Spieth made his Masters debut and shared the 54-hole lead with Bubba Watson. Spieth led by two strokes and in a good spot to become the youngest Masters champion in history during the final round; Tiger Woods holds the record at age 21. Watson regained the lead going into the second nine years and never relinquished it. Spieth finished in second place behind Jonas Blixt in second place, becoming the youngest runner-up in Masters history. In any of his rounds, Spieth ended the tournament with no points over even (72%). For the first time, his finish pushed him into the top ten in the world rankings.

Spieth was named in the 2014 Ryder Cup team after Horton Smith's 1929 appearance, making him the youngest American to play in the games for 85 years.

Spieth won his second tournament as a professional at the Emirates Australian Open in Australasia in November; in the final round, he shot a course-record 63 to win by six strokes.

He won the Hero World Challenge in Florida a week later. He won the tournament wire to wire, and in doing so, he set a new tournament scoring record of 26-under-par.

Patrick Reed and Sean O'Hair won the Valspar Championship in a three-way playoff on March 15, Spieth defeated the Valspar Championship. He won the third extra hole by sinking a 30-foot birdie putt. He climbed to 6th in the Official World Golf Rankings after winning, putting him 6th in the rankings.

He climbed to second place in the world after a runner-up finish at the Valero Texas Open. Spieth was eliminated in a sudden-death playoff at the Shell Houston Open the previous week, having held the 54-hole lead. He shot a final round 70, but he had to hole an 8-footer on the last hole to force the playoff after low rounds by J. The B. Holmes and Johnson Wagner teams were pushed to the top of the leaderboard, with B. Holmes and Johnson Wagner naming them. Spieth put his drive nearly into the water on the first hole and then followed his weak shot into the green-side bunker, effectively ending his elimination from the playoff tournament, which was also won by Holmes.

Spieth finished the day eight strokes under par with a three-shot lead in the Masters Tournament in Augusta, Georgia, on April 9, the youngest player to lead the Masters after the first round; Spieth set a new record as the youngest player to lead the Masters since the first round. With their rounds being shot in 1986 and 1996 respectively, he was just one shot behind the course record of 63 shared by Nick Price and Greg Norman.

Spieth shot 66 the following day to set a new 36-hole Masters scoring record by shooting 14-under-130 in two rounds. Raymond Floyd's previous record of 13-under 131. Through three rounds, he tied for the 54-hole record at the Masters, shooting a 16-under-200.

Spieth posted a 19-under-par final round, but bogeyed the final hole, resulting in him tying Tiger Woods' 1997 score record at 18-under. Spieth set the record for the most birds during the Masters by 28 years old, becoming the second youngest individual to win the Masters. His victory was the first wire-to-wire Masters win since Raymond Floyd's 1976 victory. The victory put Spieth to second place in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Spieth claimed his second major championship on June 21, his second major championship. In the final round, he carded a one-under 69 to finish with 275 (-5) and win the tournament by a single stroke over Dustin Johnson and Louis Oosthuizen. Spieth had started the day in a four-way tie for the lead and was playing in the penultimate team alongside Branden Grace.

He began his final round with a bogey that fell behind, but after a run 12 pars and two birds in his next 14 holes put him into a tie for the lead with Grace at five under par, he tied for the lead. Grace shot out of bounds on the 16th hole, resulting in a double bogey, and Spieth capitalized on a long birdie putt to produce a three-shot swing, giving Spieth a two-shot lead with two holes remaining. On the 17th tee, however, Spieth pushed his tee into the thick woods, resulting in a double bogey and a short tie; with Johnson's birdie on the 16th, the two were briefly tied for the lead. Spieth made birdie on the 18th to become the clubhouse's leader. On the 72nd hole, Johnson had an eagle putt to win the tournament outright, but three-putted from 12 feet to finish a stroke behind.

Spieth became the first player to win the Masters and the U.S. Open in the same year, and the first since Tiger Woods in 2002. Craig Wood, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer, and Jack Nicklaus were among the other four golfers to achieve this feat. He was the fourth-youngest player to win multiple major championships and the youngest champion of the U.S. Open since Bobby Jones in 1923.

Spieth chose the John Deere Classic rather than the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open this week, where many other top-ranked players were preparing for the links style courses this week.

With a 61 in the 3rd round, Spieth fired in the lowest round of his professional career to date. After Gillis hit the ball in the pond on his 2nd playoff hole, he eventually won the tournament in a playoff with Tom Gillis. Spieth won his fourth match of the year. With a final score of –14, one stroke out of a playoff, his grand slam attempt came to an end. He had been tied for the lead but bogeyed the 17th hole to fall a stroke behind and could not make his birdie on the 18th to begin the playoffs.

He came in second second second in the Official World Golf Ranking after finishing second behind Jason Day at the 2015 PGA Championship. He was the 18th different golfer to be ranked for the first time. In August 2015, he was number one for two weeks and then one week in September.

Spieth missed the cut in The Barclays and the Deutsche Bank Championship, the first two events of the FedEx Cup playoffs. However, his finish at the BMW Championship in 13th place placed him second overall in the standings. Spieth won the 2015 Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club by four strokes, despite only needing a victory to clinch the championship. Spieth became the ninth FedEx Cup champion and received a $10 million reward for winning the Cup, his fifth of the year. In 2015, Spieth set a PGA Tour record for a single year in 2012. He has regained the world number one position.

Spieth received all the major awards this year: PGA Player of the Year and PGA Tour Player of the Year (Jack Nicklaus Trophy), Vardon Trophy and Byron Nelson Award for leading the tour's scoring average, and Arnold Palmer Award for leading the tour's budget list.

Spieth won the Hyundai Tournament of Champions in a spirited run, defeating Patrick Reed in eight strokes. His score of 30 was not only a personal record but it was also the second time a player reached 30 in a 72-hole PGA Tour tournament, after Ernie Els did the same feat in 2003. Spieth also beat Tiger Woods in his seventh PGA Tour contest before the age of 23.

Spieth had a bogey-free 66 in the first round of the Masters in April 2016, opening up a two-shot advantage over the field. During the second round, he carded a two-over-par 74, leading by one over Rory McIlroy going into the weekend. After a third round 73, he led by a stroke. Spieth suffered one of the biggest losses in Masters history, with some comparing it to Greg Norman's meltdown at the 1996 Masters. Spieth shot two balls into the water at the par-3 12th hole, putting him down and leaving him tied for fourth, three shots behind, after bogeys at the 10th and 11th holes. He came in second place in the tournament, losing by three strokes to Danny Willett. Nick Faldo, a three-time Masters champion who won the 1996 tournament, said Spieth's demise "made Norman's feel like a joyful stroll down Magnolia Lane."

For the first time since his Masters' death when he won the Dean & DeLuca Invitational in May 29, 2016, Spieth returned to the winner's circle. On Sunday, he birdied six holes on the back nine to see off the challenge of Harris English by three strokes.

At the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Spieth declined to participate in the US golf team.

Spieth was instrumental in the 2016 FedEx Cup Playoffs' strong showing, and he was instrumental in the U.S. Ryder Cup team's triumphant victory. Spieth was viewed as the world's highest ranked player, behind Jason Day and Rory McIlroy, demonstrating both his maturity as a 23-year-old man and his admiration for him.

Spieth won the Emirates Open in November for the second time in three years, shooting a final round 69 to finish at 12, level with Australians Cameron Smith and Ashley Hall. Spieth won the championship on the first playoff hole with a birdie, while Hall missed his birdie chance. Spieth's 11th appearance and his third in 2016 were his third.

Spieth qualified as the defending champion of the SBS Tournament of Champions last year, but she was forced to settle for a tie for third, six shots behind eventual champion Justin Thomas. Spieth finished third at the Sony Open in Hawaii this week. Waste Management Phoenix Open is another top ten finish to Spieth's good start to the year.

Spieth won his first victory of the year on February 12, finishing at 19, in his 100th PGA Tour appearance as a professional. Spieth, with Tiger Woods, became just the second man to win nine times on the PGA Tour before the age of 24, post-World War II.

His first appearance at the Genesis Open placed him second on the podium, before finishing tied for 12th at the WGC-Mexico Championship. The WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play was also a World Golf Championship event, and he was going to compete. Spieth was seeded 5th in the swimming competition, but he didn't progress out of the pool stage, a surprise loss to Japan's 54th seed Hideto Tanihara (who will progress to the semi-finals) in his first match, ultimately costing him. Spieth's first missed cut of the year came a week later at the Shell Houston Open.

Spieth finished tied for 11th in his fourth appearance at the Masters. It was the first time he had failed to place first or second in the year's first major championship. Spieth came only two shots off the lead in the final round, but a 3-over-par 75 on Sunday put paid the tribute to his second Green Jacket aspirations.

Spieth missed consecutive cuts at the Players Championship (his third consecutive cut at golf's unofficial "Fifth Major") and the AT&T Byron Nelson after finishing 4th with Ryan Palmer at the Zurich Classic. At the Dean & DeLuca Invitational, Spieth failed to properly defend his title, finishing a shot behind eventual winner Kevin Kisner. At the Memorial Tournament, his last action before the United States Open, a solid if unspectacular tie for 13th was maintained.

Spieth came to Erin Hills for the US Open looking for his second major title in three years and his third major championship overall. With big names like the world's top-three (defending champion and world no. ), the world's best-three have been a hit (defending champion and world no. 1). Dustin Johnson, the world's best known entrepreneur. 2 Rory McIlroy and the world no. 1 No. 2 Rory McIlroy and the world no. 2 No. 2 has been in the United Kingdom for a long time. (Spieth was all about failing to make the cut on Monday, but it wasn't impossible to win with just eight shots covering all the participants from the weekend. However, a 4-over-par 76 on Saturday put paid to any hopes, and he ultimately finished at one-over-par for the tournament and in a tie for 35th.

Spieth made his debut at the Travelers Championship last week and began with a 7-under-par 63 to lead after the first round and held his advantage going into the final round. He and Daniel Berger, both hoping for his second match in three weeks, lost the tournament at a 12:12. On the first playoff hole, Spieth holed out for birdie on his 10th PGA Tour victory, just over a month before his 24th birthday.

Spieth won the Open Championship at Royal Birkdale on July 23, his third major trophy. After a first-round 65 and held the lead outright after the second and third rounds, leaving him three shots ahead of Matt Kuchar going into the final day, Spieth tied for the lead and held the lead outright. However, the lead was shattered after three bogeys in his first four holes of the final round. Kuchar took the lead with five holes remaining after Spieth drove his ball 100 yards to the right of the fairway on the par-4 13th, leaving him with an unplayable lie and needing to drop a 3-iron from the practice range area and making bogey, leaving him just a shot behind Kuchar. Spieth apologised to Kuchar for the 21-minute delay in finding out his wayward tee shot in a show of good sportsmanship.

Spieth's reaction to the wretched loss of his tee shot at 14 (where he'd make birdie), draining a 35-foot putt for an eagle at 15, and carding birds at 16, 17 and 17. Spieth finished with a 69, three strokes ahead of Kuchar, who also carded a 69, and became the second player in history after Jack Nicklaus to win three of the four major championships before his 24th birthday.

Spieth spieth gave the 3-iron from his hole on the 13th hole to Royal Birkdale later today.

Spieth finished in 13th at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, and the chance to be the first man in history to win the PGA Championship for the sixth time in a lifetime. However, he would finish in a tie for 28th; this was his first and only chance to be the youngest to achieve this feat.

In the first FedEx Cup Playoff match at The Northern Trust, Spieth came in second, losing to world no. Dustin Johnson was a member of the playoffs. Going into the final round, Spieth had been leading by three strokes, and after five holes on Sunday, it was five shots clear. However, his tee shot discovered the water at the par-3 6th (where he made double bogey) and Johnson pulled level at the 10th. The two guys were level going into the 72nd and final hole of regular play after a dramatic par putt on the 17th. Spieth seemed to have the advantage after a 70-foot putt to within a few feet, while Johnson had to make a 20-footer for par (after pulling his tee shot into the rough) to get a playoff. Johnson made the putt and then pulled the lake and wedged to within a few feet on the first playoff hole (also at 18). Spieth discovered the fringe on the back of the green, but was unable to make the birdie he needed on his fourth victory of the year, and in the process, seeing Johnson win his fourth title of the season.

Justin Thomas, who won his fifth victory of the season, will finish as runner-up at the Dell Technologies Championship next week. The BMW Championship will place Spieth in a tie for seventh place.

Spieth qualified for his second FedEx Cup title in three years as he entered the season-ending Tour Championship at East Lake. Justin Thomas finished second in a tie for seventh in a row for the second week in a row, while Xander Schauffele took the season-long title and the $10 million reward. He also named 2017 PGA Tour Player of the Year. Spieth received the Vardon Trophy and Byron Nelson Award for the second time in his career for leading the tour in scoring average.

As Spieth was part of the United States team that stabbed their title with a convincing win, a third Presidents Cup victory would follow. Spieth is off to Australia for his third Australian Open title in four years after a near-two-month break. After a final round of 67 (his best round of the tournament), he finished in eighth place.

Spieth started his season by competing in both tournaments during the Hawaii swing, finishing 9th at the Sentry Tournament of Champions and tied for 18th (90'8") before failing to qualify for 20th as the defending champion at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in Hawaii.

Spieth was proclaimed the Chairman of the PGA Tour in February, replacing Davis Love III. The 16-member advisory committee advises PGA Tour's Policy Board and Commissioner Jay Monahan on tour safety issues; Spieth will serve a three-year term (2019–2021). Spieth had been struggling with his putting at the start of the year, but the Genesis Open tie for 9th left him feeling upbeat about his play, saying, "I putted really well this week, which is amazing." I have a great deal going into next year in the state of my game.' At the WGC-Mexico Championship, a tie for 14th will follow.

Spieth, who was triumphant in 2015 and the U.S. Open, a month away from the Masters Tournament, was hoping to start his season at the Valspar Championship, where he went on to his magnificent year in 2015, which culminated in his triumph at Augusta and the US Open. However, Spieth's difficult campaign raged, with the loss of the cut at +5. He was seeded 4th in the WGC Match Play, his next start. He was crowned victorious over Charl Schwartzel and Li Haotong, but Ryder Cup playing partner Patrick Reed defeated him in their final match, ensuring Spieth did not advance to the group stage. Spieth finished in a tie for third at the Houston Open in his last game before Augusta.

Spieth opened the Masters with a six-under par 66 (including five straight birdies on holes 13–17), putting him in second place in four years, giving him a two-shot lead in the first major of the year. He was nine strokes behind leader Patrick Reed in the final round of 5. He shot an 8-under 64 in Masters for his best final round score in Masters history, with a score of 8-under 64. On the 18th hole, he tied the tournament record score (63, 9) but he missed a par putt. He came in third place, two strokes behind the champion Reed.

Spieth, a freshman at the Zurich Classic in New Orleans, missed the cut in his first appearance. Spieth made the cut at The Players Championship and shot a personal best round of 65 during the third round, putting him on a collision course with a potential top-ten finish. Despite this, a two-over-par final round of 74 (with a quadruple bogey on the 72nd hole) left him at 6 for the tournament and a tie for 41st. At the AT&T Byron Nelson tie for 21st and a tie for 32nd will follow, followed. Spieth will miss the cut at the Memorial Tournament in his last start before the US Open.

Spieth missed the cut at the U.S. Open by a single solitary after not making the cut at a major championship since the 2014 PGA Championships. Spieth's Travelers Championship win was his first defense of his Travelers Championship title, which featured 6 birds and an eagle. He couldn't sustain that form for the remainder of the tournament, and he finished in a tie for 42nd at 4.4.

Spieth's first game after a month off from action, the defending champion and looking for his first victory since being unable to win at The Open in Carnoustie, where he was the defending champion and looking for his first victory since being crowned a year earlier. He was aiming to join Tiger Woods, Bobby Jones, and Young Tom Morris as the only players to have won at least four majors before age 25. His defense started with a 1-over-par round of 72, but he stepped into contention over the next two days, with a bogey-free Saturday round of 65 moving him into a tie for the lead with fellow Americans Xander Schauffele and Kevin Kisner. On Sunday, Spieth shot 76, with no birdies on his cards, falling into a tie for ninth at 4, finishing four shots behind champion Francesco Molinari.

In his first attempt at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, Spieth finished in a tie for 12th, his second attempt to win the grand slam at the PGA Championship.

Spieth finished in a tie for 25th at The Northern Trust before finishing in a tied 12th place at the Dell Technologies Championship during the FedEx Cup Playoffs. Spieth 31st in the FedEx Cup standings, in a tie for a 55th finish at the BMW Championship. Spieth would miss the final event of the season after only top-30 qualifying for the Tour Championship for the first time in his career, leaving him winless in the 2017–18 season.

Spieth participated in all five sessions of the Ryder Cup, earning three points alongside Justin Thomas, but Europe will regain the trophy in Paris.

Spieth finished 55th at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open in his first appearance on the 2018-19 PGA Tour. For the first time in his professional career, Spieth has gone without a victory in the Mayakoba Golf Classic, meaning he will miss the cut.

Spieth began 2019 by missing the cut by a single shot at the Sony Open in Hawaii before finishing in a tie for 35th at the Farmers Insurance Open. At the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, a tie for 45th was followed by a shoot off the lead at the halfway point, but the man was disqualified after being in over-par rounds throughout the weekend.

In February 2019, Spieth advanced to the Genesis Open final round in a tie for fourth. However, brisk weather and strong winds left him with a final round 81. On No. 30, his scorecard had a double bogey. On No. 2, a triple bogey on No. 2 has arisen. On the treacherous 10th hole, he three-putted from 4 feet and a quadruple bogey 8. At the WGC-Mexico Championship, a tie for 54th was followed by a tie for 54th. Spieth missed the cut at the Players Championship for the fourth time in five years before being disqualified in the round robin stages at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play and then finishing in a tie for 30th at the Valero Texas Open in 2013.

Spieth's lowest finish at Augusta, a tie for 21st at five under par, was his sixth appearance at The Masters. Spieth's third attempt at the Career Grand Slam after a tie for 54th finishes at the RBC Heritage and a tie for 29th finish at the AT&T Byron Nelson. He'll finish sixth in the 2018 Open Championship, but his first top-ten finish since placing third at the previous year's Masters came out, but his first appearance since being 3rd. A week later at the Charles Schwab Challenge, he finished in a tie for 8th place and his upward trend in form continued with a tie for seventh place at the Memorial Tournament.

At the United States Open, Spieth finished tied for 65th before missing out on the Travelers Championship. The Open, Spieth finished in a tie for 20th in the final major of the year. Spieth missed the secondary cut at the Wyndham Championship after being tied for 12th at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude Invitational. A tie for 37th at the BMW Championship and a tie for 6th at The Northern Trust placed Spieth 44th in the rankings for the second straight season, meaning he failed to win an event twice.

Spieth's 2019-20 PGA Tour season began in South Korea, where he finished 8th in a tie for eighth position. It was not to start with a revival to form after placing fifth in the Farmers Insurance Open for the first time since his first season on tour, and after finishing tied for 55th position in the Farmers Insurance Open, he fell outside the top 50 in the world rankings for the first time since being ranked in the top 50 for the first time since his first season on tour.

After holding a lead for the majority of the third round in June 2020, Spieth tied for 10th at the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas. At the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, Spieth tied for 68th at RBC Heritage at Harbour Town Golf Links in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, and tied for 54th overall. Spieth appeared in the Workday Charity Open at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio, where he missed his second cut of the season.

At the Farmers Insurance Open, Spieth started the year off with a missed cut. He began the tournament with back-to-back 4-under-par 67s, before tying for the top with Xander Schauffele in the final round. Spieth completed the second strokes behind winner Brooks Koepka on Sunday after a 1-over par 72. Spieth's third appearance of 2021 came at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, where he failed to convert the 54-hole lead and finished in a tie for third place. Spieth finished in ties for 15th, 4th, and 48th places at the Genesis Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational, and The Players Championship in his first three years.

Spieth won the Valero Texas Open for his eighth season as a champion, ending a 1,351-day streak without a victory. He won with a third place finish in the Masters, which was followed by another victory. Spieth went on for four weeks after the Masters to transition from COVID-19 to the Pro V1X golf ball, which he contracted and recovered from. Spieth finished second at The Open Championship in July 2021, two shots behind champion Collin Morikawa. Spieth performed on the U.S. team in the 2021 Ryder Cup in September 2021; he won one, lost two, and tied one of his matches.

Spieth won his 13th PGA Tour title on April 17, 2022, defeating Patrick Cantlay in a playoff after overturned a 3 stroke deficit to third round leader Harold Varner III.

Spieth was chosen to represent the United States in the 2022 Presidents Cup in September 2022; he won all five of his matches, four of which were partnered with Justin Thomas.

PGA Tour career summary

* As of 22 April 2022

Source

The Masters 2024: Jose Maria Olazabal shows he's still the old master at Augusta National as Spaniard, 58, celebrates making the cut by producing another solid round

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 13, 2024
MIKE KEEGAN AT AUGUSTA NATIONAL: As the great Spaniard strolled off the 18th a young boy held out his hand for a ball. Jose Maria Olazabal duly obliged to leave the delighted youngster, wearing his green Masters cap, with another souvenir. The child's father held out a fist to bump. 'He was champion twice,' he told him. At 58 those victories, in 1994 and 1999, may well feel like a long time ago. These days, simply avoiding the cut represents success for a veteran who has played just two professional events since 2022.

Nicolai Hojgaard has the wind in his sails in his maiden Masters posting an impressive 73 in spite of the elements at Augusta... while multiple former champions were blown off the course

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 12, 2024
RIATH AL-SAMARRAI: They say experience is worth its weight in jackets at Augusta. No one seems to have slipped that message into the pocket of Nicolai Hojgaard. This is the 23-year-old Dane's first Masters and yet he defied conventional wisdom and the elements to post a 73 that was more impressive than it might sound. His four-under-par tally gave him possession of the early clubhouse lead, but it also represented the value of resilience on a day when gusts touched 25mph.

Masters stars, their stunning WAGs and adorable children head out for Augusta National's traditional Par 3 competition on the eve of the tournament

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 10, 2024
It wouldn't be Masters week without family members taking to the course for the traditional Par 3 curtain raiser. On the eve of every Masters championship at the Augusta National Golf Club, players invite their wives, girlfriends, sons and daughters to caddie for them in a stress-free event before the serious stuff gets underway the following day. And more often than not, they are even allowed to take shots on their behalf in the Par 3 contest as some of the world's top golfers hand over their clubs to relatives.
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