Day,
Spieth ready to resume rivalry at Australian Open
Send a link to a friend
[November 22, 2017]
By Nick Mulvenney
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Jason Day is
desperate to add the Australian Open title to his career honor roll
and would love nothing better than to do it after going
swing-for-swing with Jordan Spieth in the final round this week.
The 30-year-old former world number one has endured a poor season by
his own lofty standards and is hoping that the Australian Golf Club,
where he last played as a teenager, might offer up his first title
of 2017.
World number two Spieth has finished first, second and first at the
tournament in the three years since Day last played for the
Stonehaven Cup though, and the Australian knows he will need to be
on top of his game to better the American.
"I would love to play with Spieth on Sunday, last group, that would
be the greatest thing," the Australian told reporters on Wednesday.
"The Australian Golf Club is kind of suited to his eye, he hits it
very straight, which is what you need around here. This course does
suit up well for him and I think it does for me as well, as long as
long as I'm driving it straight.
"Fingers crossed, I can keep driving the ball better this week and
just try and get myself in contention."
Day famously outplayed Spieth in the final round of the U.S. PGA
Championship in 2015 to win his maiden major and clearly has huge
respect for the 24-year-old Texan.
"The biggest thing with Jordan is that he's a competitor," Day said.
"He doesn't have the natural ability such as (Dustin Johnson)'s
length, but he has the mental toughness, probably the best mental
toughness out of everyone on the tour, and that’s what gets him
going. He's such a grinder."
[to top of second column] |
USA's Jordan Spieth celebrates with The Claret Jug after winning The
Open Championship REUTERS/Hannah McKay
The respect is mutual. Spieth remembers fondly the battles they had
at the majors in 2015, when the American snared the Masters and
British Open and won the Tour Championship to edge Day to the PGA
Player of the Year award.
"I'm like, 'man, I don't think I could have played any better for a
year and still needed the last tournament to win that?'," Spieth
recalled.
"Honestly, it's fun then because you can kind of talk about it with
each other, how you were feeling, the respect you have for each
other's games and seasons."
Geoff Ogilvy, the 2010 Australian Open and 2006 U.S. Open champion,
is also in the field, as is Canada's Mike Weir, who won the U.S.
Masters in 2003.
Both Day and Spieth will have new relatively faces on their bags
this week with the former having recently dropped his mentor Col
Swatton for Luke Reardon.
Mike Greller has stayed in the United States to be with his newborn
son so Spieth will have his Australian coach Cameron McCormick as
caddie. The Texan concedes they will probably not indulge in the
lengthy pre-shot chats he and Greller are known for.
"Cam's more of just shut up and hit it, quit taking so long," he
said.
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|