Jordan Spieth’s efforts to get his game back on track before the season’s first major continue.
Struggling for much of the season, Spieth showed brief signs of his former self last week in Austin before failing to advance from group play. Thursday at the Valero Texas Open, he put together a solid round of 4-under 68 in what he described as “ideal scoring conditions” to move into a tie for sixth, two shots behind Si Woo Kim.
Spieth hit 12 of 18 greens in regulation but saved par on each of the six he missed, carding five birdies and suffering his lone dropped shot when he three-putted from over 60 feet on No. 15. The 68 marks his best stroke-play round since an opening 64 at the Genesis Open.
Full-field scores from the Valero Texas Open
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“Other than one three-putt, it was kind of a bogey-free type round, putting myself in position on those approach shots to make par at worse,” Spieth said. “The swing’s getting there. The putting stroke feels really good. It’s progressing day-to-day, just didn’t quite get the ball to the hole enough.”
Spieth’s hasn’t finished better than T-35 in eight stroke-play starts this season, and he has fallen to 32nd in the latest world rankings. But last week’s T-24 finish in the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play was his first top-25 result since September, and his opening-round effort in San Antonio gave him further reason to smile.
Spieth is no stranger to building late Masters momentum in his home state, having finished second at this event and T-2 at the Houston Open in 2015 in the two weeks preceding his green jacket. He also finished T-3 last year in Houston the week before a third-place result in Augusta, which remains his most recent top-5 finish.
“I’ve always enjoyed playing in Texas heading into Augusta,” Spieth said. “Trying to just get a little bit better each day as we head into the weekend here, and then into next week.”
Source: Internet