Masters regret: Spieth laments falling short of record low score

Masters regret: Spieth laments falling short of record low score

Published Apr. 15, 2015 5:26 a.m. ET

 

Jordan Spieth became the first player to reach 19-under par at any point during the Masters.

He just didn't stay there.

On the final hole, he chipped too strong and missed a 5-foot par putt that would have put him alone in the Masters record book at 19-under 269. Instead, he shares the spot at 270 with Tiger Woods, who made a 4-foot par putt in 1997 to break the record held by Raymond Floyd (1976) and Jack Nicklaus (1965).

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Asked on Tuesday if he was bothered by not making par, Spieth said, ''A little bit.''

''I knew he had shot that,'' Spieth said. ''I didn't know where I was at. I was so focused on this match I was playing with Justin (Rose).''

Not that he wasn't trying.

''When I was reading it I thought to myself, `I've been told after each round about some record. I'm sure it's for something. Let's make it,''' Spieth said.

Sure enough, he missed a 6-foot birdie putt on Friday that would have broken the record for the lowest 36-hole total at any major. He made par for 66 in the second round and still set the Masters record at 130.

Spieth reached 19 under with an up-and-down birdie behind the green on the par-5 15th. He made an 8-foot par putt on the 16th that was important - just look at the intensity of his fist pump - because he kept a four-shot lead over Rose on what had the potential for a two-shot swing. He narrowly missed a birdie on the 17th.

And then he bogeyed the 18th.

''It looks like I looked at the chip, but I had a lot of thoughts in my head and I was just enjoying that whole moment,'' Spieth said. ''I wished I had maybe glanced at it, tried to read it. But it matters very little at this point.''

Indeed. He has a green jacket. He gets to come back every year for the rest of his life. That's what matters.

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