Jordan Spieth finally has luck on his side to help him into contention at Genesis Open

Jordan Spieth had luck on his side at the Genesis Open - USA TODAY Sports
Jordan Spieth had luck on his side at the Genesis Open - USA TODAY Sports

Sometimes, a slice of luck is all a golfer requires to turn around his form, and Jordan Spieth will be praying the outrageous fortune he received in his opening seven under par here at the Genesis Open signals the end of the most alarming six months of his garlanded career.

In Spieth’s case, it was a hook of luck. Starting on the 10th on Thursday, the 25-year-old pulled his drive and watched in horror as it bounced off the buggy path on to another buggy path and buried itself in the cabbage. As he stood there with no discernible shot, wondering if he had to take a penalty for an unplayable lie, the hooter sounded because of the persistent downpours.

Play was suspended and a few hours later, the PGA Tour announced it was resetting the scores when the action resumed. So, Spieth was allowed to start again and, 64 shots later – after a stress-free par on the 10th – he was in the clubhouse holding a two-shot lead and not only thanking the stars for handing him that second chance but also for two chip-ins. “Yeah, this is a really solid start,” Spieth said. “But, certainly, I got some good breaks.”

The field resumed at 7am on Friday. Spieth played his six holes remaining in six-under, holing a 13-footer on the par-three sixth (his 15th) and spinning a sumptuous wedge to within six feet on his last hole, the par-four ninth.

It was a little before 8.30am and he wished he could go straight back out and play his second round, instead of having to wait until Saturday morning. “Riviera [Country Club] is as gettable as it can possibly be right now,” Spieth said. Indeed, the sun was out, the course was soft and with the tees brought forward because of the Thursday storms, birdies were in the air.

Justin Thomas and Adam Scott took best advantage, both reaching 10-under with seven and eight holes left of their second rounds to complete.  Rory McIlroy is on three-under with six remaining of his second round and playing partner Tiger Woods is on one-under.

The rain was Spieth's friend in the end - The rain was Spieth's friend in the end - Credit: AP/Ryan Kang
The rain was Spieth's friend in the end Credit: AP/Ryan Kang

Spieth will fancy hunting down Thomas and Scott. He  has endured an horrific fun since finishing third at The Masters last April. In the 17 tournaments he has competed in since, Spieth has racked up only one top 10 and that was one he would much rather forget.

He was in the lead going into the final round of the Open at Carnoustie and fired a 76 to labour home in ninth. Spieth, who was world No 2 just over a year ago, has now fallen to 23rd – and that is his worst position in 5½ years, since 2013 when he was in his first full year as a pro and had just turned 20. The question which started as a whisper has been growing in  volume every week – “What has happened to Jordan Spieth?”

Jordan Spieth and Tiger Woods playing the continuation of the first round on Friday - Jordan Spieth and Tiger Woods playing the continuation of the first round on Friday - Credit: Getty Images
Jordan Spieth and Tiger Woods playing the continuation of the first round on Friday Credit: Getty Images

To Sir Nick Faldo, the answer is as easy as the fix. “It’s his putting,” Faldo said, noting that when the supreme strength of Spieth’s game becomes weaker, his long game simply cannot make amends. “He’s uses up an awful lot of emotional energy getting frustrated. You have to be just like, ‘OK, that was a bad read – done’. So, I’d like him just to pull back his emotions.”

Spieth insists he is remaining calm and believes that he is finally turning the dogleg. “I have done some good work with Cameron [McCormick, his coach] and from San Diego [three weeks ago] to Pebble [Beach] last week there was significant progress. And from Pebble to there has been significant progress just in the way I feel hitting the ball,” he said.

“To be able to be bogey-free is phenomenal. But I got off to good starts in my last two events and I need to improve each day here instead of getting complacent and assuming that my game’s there. It’s still not quite there tee to green, but luckily the putter has started to heat up. My game’s trending in the right direction and sometimes that means results are coming soon, sometimes it means they’re coming later. But they’re coming.”

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