- Commissioner’s statement on Ventura, Marte
- Ronnie O’Sullivan: Masters champion ‘felt so vulnerable’ in final
- Arron Fletcher Wins 2017 WSOP International Circuit Marrakech Main Event ($140,224)
- Smith challenges Warner to go big in India
- Moncada No. 1 on MLB Pipeline’s Top 10 2B Prospects list
- Braves land 2 on MLB Pipeline’s Top 10 2B Prospects list
- Kingery makes MLB Pipeline’s Top 10 2B Prospects list
- New Zealand wrap up 2-0 after Bangladesh implosion
- Mathews, Pradeep, Gunathilaka to return to Sri Lanka
- Elliott hopes for rain for Poli
Jordan Spieth insists he’s over Masters’ collapse
- Updated: May 11, 2016
Jordan Spieth has already put in a ton of time at TPC Sawgrass and wants you to know he’s moved on from the Masters. He’s moved on from that potentially career-altering quadruple bogey at the 12th hole in the final round of the biggest tournament in the world.
“It’s the nature of the game,” said Spieth on Wednesday at the Players Championship. “I think people have moved on already. At least I thought so until I came in here today. I’ll just tell you that I’m not affected by it. It was the wrong miss at the wrong time. If I hit a good shot [this week] and it catches a gust and goes in the water, it’s not because of the Masters. It’s not something that was in my head.
“I have put it behind me. Not sure how it’ll feel if I work into contention again. I imagine thoughts won’t come up because it was just one bad hole with bad timing on my miss. I played the golf course the rest of that day extremely well.”
He also explained what exactly happened on that infamous shot (although not what happened …
continue reading in source www.cbssports.com