Jordan Follows His Tee Shot on the Fourth Hole

PGA TOUR

Jordan’s Record-Setting Year and a Look Ahead

Encores from those who deliver transcendent performances can be demanding in a what-have-you-done-for-me-lately world. So, Jordan Spieth, you won two majors in 2015. Win two more in 2016. As colossal as that sounds, nothing seems out of reach for golf’s new No. 1 player.

By any measure, Spieth just gave us one of the great seasons in PGA Tour history. He won the Masters and U.S. Open, missed getting into a playoff at the British Open by a stroke and finished second in the PGA Championship. Pause for a moment, and consider how extraordinary those feats are. He also won three other PGA Tour events, including the season-culminating TOUR Championship, claimed the FedEx Cup, set a PGA Tour record for earnings in a single season ($12,030,465), and ended the year No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Try putting that on a copier and reproducing it.

Even when I was young, my dad always told me that if you work hard on getting a little better each month, everything will work out just fine. Jordan

But here’s the thing: He doesn’t have to. Spieth, 22, with “an old head on young shoulders,” as Henrik Stenson put it, inherently understands that he can control the effort but not the expectations of others.

“I know the world will be watching,” Spieth says, “and while I have some personal goals that I am aiming to achieve, I really just want to keep working to get better each month. Even when I was young, my dad always told me that if you work hard on getting a little better each month, everything will work out just fine.”

Looking back, it seems safe to assume that Spieth followed that blueprint to the letter.

“Last year I had some private and some public goals,” he says. “For example, I made it known that I wanted to contend in the majors, which I was able to do. Since I was able to accomplish that goal, we set new ones and worked hard to reach the next goals.”

Spieth says the private goals will remain private, but what he will say is that he is “most proud of my control and performance at Augusta,” and that “walking up 18 on Sunday and taking in the crowds is a memory I’ll never forget. I will always remember that feeling.

“But I’d also say I’m really proud of the way I kept myself in contention in the last three majors. As I’ve said, majors are like playing two tournaments in one, so they are demanding, to say the least.”


As for 2016, Spieth will begin his monthly quest for improvement next week at the Hyundai Tournament of Champions in Maui. “Specifically, I’m working on gaining distance in my drives to give myself better options,” he says.

Meanwhile, he has not entirely dismissed the idea of an encore. He intends to retain his same focus, despite the growing attention and the demands on his time and energy that come with the World No. 1 ranking.

“We’ve done a good job trying to keep things the same,” he says. “My team works hard to limit the demands, so I can focus on my golf and on my friends and family when I’m home. The challenge, of course, is the scrutiny of every shot and round, but I still limit what I listen to or read and just worry about my own game.”

One thing is certain: Jordan Spieth made history in 2015 and has the physical skills and mental strength to accomplish amazing things. Whether we’re in for more record-shattering surprises from this young man is something the golf world will have a lot of fun watching. Bring on 2016.