Subscribe
Demo

The last time Jordan Spieth was on top of the golf world was nine years ago when he strolled down the 18th fairway at Royal Birkdale with the Claret Jug in hand. That Sunday, Spieth joined Jack Nicklaus as the only player to win three different majors at age 23 or younger. Everything was in front of him.

Things have been different for Spieth since that day at the 2017 Open when he painted his masterpiece. He has won only twice on the PGA Tour since and no majors. No longer golf’s wunderkind, Spieth arrives back at Birkdale changed by time and life.

Advertisement

“Both [on course and off] I’m very different; I’ve changed a lot,” Spieth told GOLF at the PGA Championship at Aronimink when asked about morphing from golf’s young hero to a star trying to find an ember to re-spark the flame.

That day outside Philadelphia, Spieth was adamant his game was in the best place it has been since his prime. Everything hadn’t clicked at the same time, but the game is all there, back at a level close to where he was that day in Southport. Something was just missing. Find it, and perhaps the dominoes would start to fall.

So, of course, when Spieth arrived back at Royal Birkdale, he went back to the place where he last was that Jordan Spieth.

“Walking up the 18th and remembering what it was like to walk up that 18th hole nine years ago, [I putted] to the pins that I putted to [that Sunday],” Spieth told the media on Monday.

Advertisement

There’s something to be said for returning to a place where you achieved your dreams and letting those memories fill your soul, pointing you to the path back. But you can also never be what you once were. Perhaps in that sense it’s perfect that a different Jordan Spieth arrives at a different Royal Birkdale.

When Spieth triumphed in Southport, he famously made an improbable bogey 5 on the 13th hole after he blew his tee shot right, hit a fan in the head and had to take an unplayable, eventually playing his third shot from the driving range. That won’t be an option this week. In the years since his victory, Royal Birkdale has made some changes. The area right of the 13th will be considered out of bounds this week; it’s now a fan village and the OB will start at the cart path right of the dunes.

That’s not the only change at the host of this year’s Open. The par-3 14th, where Spieth hit a brilliant 6-iron to 5 feet to kick off his winning birdie run, is no longer. The hole was removed during the renovation and the par-5 15th, where Spieth made a 50-foot eagle putt and shouted “Go get that!” to caddie Michael Greller, is now the 14th hole and that green has been moved to a more elevated position.

“Obviously, some of those holes coming in have changed,” Spieth said. “That [6-iron at 14] was maybe the best shot and [the eagle at 15 was the] best putt I’ve ever hit. They don’t exist anymore, which is a little unusual. Hope to create some more great memories here.

Advertisement

“In some regard, it’s kind of nice because I’ll never hit a shot that — this last time, it was like a walk-off. I go back and try to do it again and I don’t hit as good of a shot, then it’s not as cool.” Spieth said.

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply

2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.