Seduce
Getty Images
Jordan Spieth knows where he wants to reach his return to PGA Tour After hand surgery offseason to fix an issue that has plagued it since 2018.
Spieth arrived in this week AT&T Pebble Beach pro-am – a signature event – with a clear vision of what success will look like in the coming weeks and what it hopes to reach by the end of the year.
“The shortest term is to feel like spending these three weeks and I feel as good or better than I did when I started so much physically,” Spieth said during his press conference in front of the tournament on Wednesday. “This is a kind of not very exciting goal, but the one that means a lot. And then I would like to work myself in quarrel in front of masters at least once.
“And then perhaps a high goal this year would be to do the Ryder Cup team. I don’t have many points away from last season, so given the level of competition on the American side on the point list, you will need To do some things, really good to some really big tours.
Spieth is currently the 65th on the list of points of the United States, after Gary Woodland and in front of Jake KNAPP.
A main match by Team USA, Spieth should run to be choosing a captain if he proves healthy and finds shape this year. However, the big champion three times would prefer to collect points and not pressure Captain Keegan Bradley.
Now 31 years old, Spieth is focused on the patient’s patient as he returns, knowing that he still has many golf in front of him to achieve his highest goals.
“Many of this have been a kind of 10-year view,” Spieth said. “I think if I try to do it this year by getting back from this a” should play well “, I will simply be frustrated because even though it was a little while ago, I really didn’t play golf. Of course, competitive, But even playing-I haven’t played many rounds since mid-August because of the process. To decide, let’s become completely healthy and take some of these shots from these hanging lies.
“Just playing is very different from hitting many balls from mattresses. So trying to adapt to it is shorter the long -term type of my mind of my mind may have 10 years with similar schedules and decide Some goals for some wins and some who claim in diplomas and things like that. ”
Once one of the new phenomena of the game, the spieth is now dad and gives priority to things differently. But he is approaching this 10-year plan in the same way he did last decade: believing he is one of the best players in the world and will reassess now that his hand is no longer an annoying issue for managed.
“I think I’m still – I don’t think I need to change a lot. I think to be healthy and then trust,” Spieth said.
That begins this week at Pebblewhere he is trying to hold his realistic expectations. He knows that his game may not return it all right away. Patience will be the key as Reboot Jordan Spieth is descended from the ground.
“I think this will be the hardest thing for me is to manage it early,” Spieth said about his expectations for himself. “You know, how patience I will have if I don’t do – I wouldn’t be surprised if I’m in the first 10 places I enter Sunday here, but my expectation is – I wouldn’t be surprised if I’m not Know, I have to get into some rounds.
“But I think their management early will be really important. I don’t feel I have any of the outside, so it’s all my only at this point,” spieth continued. “I have done a little of everything in my career, so I’m no longer the phase of that really.”
PGA Tour has had a sleepy start in his season. Many of her stars are making their first start of the season at Pebble Beach, including Spieth, Scottie Scheffler and Rory Mcilroy (PD World Tour Start).
As the season regenerates at Pebble Beach, PGA Tour needs a resurrected and healthy spieth to reunite in the upper Pro Golf era. If Pip taught us anything, is that the spieth remains one of some big game movers.
Now healthy, the tournament needs spieth to be once again.
“>>
Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for golf. com before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break the 90 and will never lose confidence that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end. Josh can be reached in josh.schrock@golf.com.