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Spieth has suddenly made the PGA Championship a lot more interesting

 
Jordan Spieth celebrates an eagle during his U.S. Open victory.
Jordan Spieth celebrates an eagle during his U.S. Open victory.
Published July 25, 2017

SOUTHPORT, England — Now that the PGA Championship in Charlotte next month has gone from a big deal to a big-big deal because of Jordan Spieth, there is no telling where he might lead us. On Sunday, of course, he led us way up a dune.

It has gone past curious and wound its way to amusing, the human contradiction Spieth presents in a world full of contradictory humans. At once, he is a 23-year-old person who shows little attention-neediness and zero capacity to preen, and a 23-year-old golfer who already has assembled some of the most shocking, attention-hogging Sunday golf of the young century. He tells of his rounds in an unexcitable, calming voice that could lead us all into meditation, while the subjects of which he speaks sound absolutely berserk.

He doesn't mean to do all this.

"Seventeen pars and birdie would have been fine, too," he said Sunday after he won the 146th British Open with eight pars, five bogeys, four birdies, one eagle, one climb up a dune way wayward on No. 13 to search for his ball, one blind shot over the dune on No. 13, one apparent collapse and one mighty stemming of one apparent collapse.

Maybe for Charlotte, he'll feel free to play boringly. "I think there's no pressure," said his treasured caddie, Michael Greller. "He's absolutely free-rolling it. He's going to play in 30 more PGAs the rest of his life."

Of course, if Spieth wins one of those 30, he will become only the sixth male player to complete the career Grand Slam as constituted since 1934. If he wins this particular one Aug. 10-13 at Quail Hollow, he will become the youngest at 24 years, 17 days. Tiger Woods was 24 years, 5-plus months when he destroyed the 2000 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach to complete his set. Jack Nicklaus was 26 when he took the 1966 British Open. Gary Player was 29 when he won the 1965 U.S. Open and thus all four. Gene Sarazen was 33 when he won the 1935 Masters. Ben Hogan was 40 when he won the British Open in 1953, although any mention of that needs this blaring accompaniment: on his first and only try.

Like Rory McIlroy, who lacks only the Masters, Spieth edges toward a microscopic circle. "I've answered this question a few times a couple years ago (when he won the 2015 Masters and U.S. Open at 21), so I'll be careful with my answer," Spieth said. "It's amazing. I feel blessed to be able to play the game I love, but I don't think that comparisons are — I don't compare myself. And I don't think that they're appropriate or necessary. So to be in that company, no doubt, is absolutely incredible.

"But I'm very careful as to what that means going forward, because what those guys have done has transcended the sport. And in no way, shape or form do I think I'm anywhere near that."

Of course, he formed this measured, thoughtful answer after playing an off-the-wall round of golf that also included bizarre minutes spent roaming among the sponsor trailers near the driving range during No. 13, trying to find the suitable drop spot. He formed the answer after a 2016 Masters when he held a five-shot lead with nine holes to play, seemed the least likely guy to lose six strokes across the next three holes and then went bogey, bogey, quadruple bogey, then righted himself and finished runner-up. He formed it after a 2015 U.S. Open in which he arrived at No. 17 with the lead, went into some flora, three-putted for double bogey, to see all of it deluged in memory by Dustin Johnson's misadventure on. 18 that took Johnson from a win to a playoff to a loss, all in three putts.

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Still, by Sunday morning, he seemed the least likely guy to squander a three-shot lead. Then he squandered it within four holes and led everyone, including Stephen Curry on a rowdy adventure. ("Are you not entertained?" the NBA star tweeted.)

All along, he carried along the ghouls from two Masters ago, in a way he wouldn't admit Saturday evening when he assured a room of listeners it could not become the culprit if he wound up losing here. By Sunday evening, he said, "You know, I thought winning a few weeks later (in 2016) in Fort Worth was huge. But I knew that another major would be the one thing that would, I think, just completely, over the hill, you know, I'm capable of closing these majors out. Because you just — I really didn't do much wrong (at that Masters), just hit a couple of bad swings. And all of a sudden it was, in my own head, 'How could I not close out a five-stroke lead with nine to play?' "

At his most promising major Sunday since then, he flopped straightaway and veered toward a possibility of being "questioned about and thought about and murmured about," he confessed, "and that adds a lot of pressure to me." After four holes and three bogeys and a fumbled lead, he said, "I wasn't questioning myself as a closer, but I was questioning why I couldn't just perform the shots that I was before." He wished he could blot out the 2016 Masters, "but thoughts creep in," he said.

Yet he shoved aside all that junk, took his most rewarding title to date and sent the game into the late summer with no idea what might await in Charlotte.