AMERICAN Jordan Spieth capped a brilliant season in sensational style as he won the Tour Championship on Sunday that also won him the FedExCup playoffs title for an US$11.48 million pay day.
The 22-year-old Texan, whose five wins this season included the Masters and U.S. Open, fired a final round 69 for 271 and a four-shot win over Sweden’s Henrik Stenson, New Zealand’s Danny Lee and England’s Justin Rose.
With the win — and Jason Day’s 10th-place finish — Spieth will recapture the No. 1 ranking Australia’s Day had held for a week.
He also set a U.S. PGA Tour record for earnings, the Tour Championship first prize of US$1.485 million taking his total for the year to US$12,030,465 — not including the US$10 million bonus that came with his FedEx Cup playoff title.
“This year is unreal,” said Spieth, who in addition to his two major victories finished tied for fourth at the British Open and runner-up to Day at the PGA Championship.
“I don’t know how we sit down and figure out how to improve on it, but we’re going to try and do that.”
Spieth also won the U.S. Tour’s Valspar Championship and John Deere Classic — but admitted he was stung by back-to-back missed cuts in the first two events of the U.S. Tour’s elite four tournament playoff series.
“I got mad,” said Spieth, who responded by preparing for the Tour Championship as if it was a major.
“I didn’t have a great playoffs, but I put a lot into this week. Mentally I stayed in it, and boy, that putter sure paid off.”
Day had come on strong at the end of the season, but with this win Spieth dampened any debate about who would deserve Player of the Year honors.
Spieth started the day with a one-stroke lead over Stenson, and the Swede — who could also have seized the playoff bonus with a victory — tried to keep the pressure on.
Back to back bogeys from Spieth at the fifth and sixth saw Stenson pull level, but Spieth was just too good on the greens. He poured in a 21-foot birdie putt at the eighth as Stenson bogeyed to restore his two-shot cushion.
He drained an 18-footer at the ninth — to maintain his advantage despite Stenson’s birdie, and bounced back from a bogey at 10 with a 47-foot birdie putt at the 11th.
The rest of the way Spieth found the clutch par putts when he needed them. That included a nine-footer at the 15th and a putt of about the same distance at 16.(SD-Agencies)
|