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Getting your player ready...

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Jordan Spieth tapped in his final putt to cap off a record performance and bent over in relief. He just as easily could have been taking a bow.

This was a Masters for the ages.

Not since Tiger Woods in 1997 has a 21-year-old faced so little stress while making a mockery of par in a major. Not since Raymond Floyd in 1976 has anyone withstood the pressure of leading for all four rounds at Augusta National.

Only one other Masters champion — Craig Wood in 1941 — has never let anyone closer to him than three shots the entire way.

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Spieth took his place among the best in the game Sunday when he closed with a 2-under 70 for a four-shot victory over Phil Mickelson and Justin Rose, becoming the second-youngest champion behind Woods to wear a green jacket.

“This was arguably the greatest day of my life,” Spieth said. “To join Masters history and put my name on that trophy and to have this jacket forever, it’s something that I can’t fathom right now.”

He left everyone else dazed, too.

Spieth missed a 5-foot par putt on the final hole that only kept him from breaking another record this week at the Masters. He tied the 72-hole scoring mark that Woods set at 18-under 270.

It was still enough to beat Mickelson (69) and Rose (70) by four shots.

“Playing with Jordan, he’s going to sort of fly the flag for golf for quite a while,” Rose said. “People were getting excited about that out there. You could tell.”

There were standing ovations all the way around to celebrate the latest star in golf, the next addition to a new generation just as Woods and Mickelson are approaching the back nines of their careers.

Rory McIlroy is still No. 1 in the world by a reasonable margin. Spieth is now No. 2. It’s the first time players 25 or younger have been Nos. 1-2 in the world.

“He’s got four majors. That’s something I can still only dream about,” Spieth said. “I don’t know, as far as a rivalry right now.”

For all the hype about the Grand Slam bid by McIlroy and the return of Woods, this week was about the arrival of another star.

“It’s awfully impressive,” McIlroy said after closing with a 66 to finish fourth. “It’s nice to get your major tally up and running at an early stage in your career. It’s great to see, great for the game, and I’m sure there will be many more.”

Woods jarred his right wrist when he struck wood under the pine straw on the ninth hole. He didn’t hit a fairway on the front nine and never was in the game, closing with a 73 to finish 13 shots behind.

Mickelson tried to make a run. So did Rose.

Lefty holed a bunker shot for eagle on the par-5 15th, but he couldn’t make a birdie the rest of the way. Rose got to within three shots of Spieth on three occasions on the front nine, and Spieth kept his nerve. He picked up two shots on Rose on Nos. 8 and 9 — the same spot where the Masters got away from Spieth last year.

“I thought today might be easier having played with the lead on Saturday. It wasn’t,” Spieth said. “It’s the most incredible week of my life. This is as great as it gets in our sport. … I’m still kind of shock a little bit.”

And he will keep the editors of the Masters record book busy. Among the marks he established this week:

• The 36-hole record at 14-under 130.

• The 54-hole record at 16-under 200.

• The most birdies for the tournament at 28.

• The lowest opening round by a champion at 64.

“He has no weaknesses,” Mickelson said. “He doesn’t overpower the golf course, but he plays the course strategically well. He plays all the shots properly. And he has that ability to focus and see things clear when the pressure is on and perform at his best when the pressure is on.

“That’s something that you really can’t teach,” he said. “Some players are able to do it, some players aren’t. And he is.”

Spieth was reminded of how far he has come, and how quickly, when he stood on the first tee with a four-shot lead and history in his hands. His caddie, Michael Greller, reminded him that the Texas golf team was playing a match in California. This would be Spieth’s senior year.

“He said, ‘Face it: Aren’t you glad you’re here instead of there?'” Spieth said with a smile.

It was a light moment in an arena of high pressure. Rose promptly knocked in a 10-foot birdie putt, and Spieth followed him with a birdie. It was like that all week.

Spieth rolled in a 20-foot birdie putt on No. 10 for a six-shot lead. It was his 26th birdie of the Masters, breaking the tournament record that Mickelson set in 2001. The next target was the 72-hole scoring record that Woods set in 1997, and he almost got there except for that bogey at the end.

He twice went for the green on par 5s on the back nine, barely clearing the creek at No. 13 and going just over the back on No. 15, both times making birdie. The birdie on the 15th made him the only player in Masters history to reach 19-under par at any point.

None of that mattered. Spieth had the green jacket.

“This was the ultimate goal in my golf life,” he said.

And he might just be getting started.


Masters Par Scores

Player Purse Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Total
Jordan Spieth (600) $1,800,000 64 66 70 70 270
Phil Mickelson (270) $880,000 70 68 67 69 274
Justin Rose (270) $880,000 67 70 67 70 274
Rory McIlroy (150) $480,000 71 71 68 66 276
Hideki Matsuyama (120) $400,000 71 70 70 66 277
Paul Casey (101) $335,000 69 68 74 68 279
Dustin Johnson (101) $335,000 70 67 73 69 279
Ian Poulter (101) $335,000 73 72 67 67 279
Charley Hoffman (82) $270,000 67 68 71 74 280
Zach Johnson (82) $270,000 72 72 68 68 280
Hunter Mahan (82) $270,000 75 70 68 67 280
Rickie Fowler (65) $196,000 73 72 70 67 282
Bill Haas (65) $196,000 69 71 72 70 282
Ryan Moore (65) $196,000 74 66 73 69 282
Kevin Na (65) $196,000 74 66 70 72 282
Kevin Streelman (65) $196,000 70 70 70 72 282
Sergio Garcia (56) $155,000 68 74 71 70 283
Tiger Woods (56) $155,000 73 69 68 73 283
Louis Oosthuizen (52) $135,000 72 69 71 72 284
Henrik Stenson (52) $135,000 73 73 70 68 284
Russell Henley (50) $120,000 68 74 72 71 285
Keegan Bradley (47) $92,833 71 72 75 68 286
Angel Cabrera (47) $92,833 72 69 73 72 286
Ernie Els (47) $92,833 67 72 75 72 286
Mark O’Meara (47) $92,833 73 68 77 68 286
Patrick Reed (47) $92,833 70 72 74 70 286
Bernd Wiesberger $92,833 75 70 70 71 286
Jonas Blixt (41) $68,000 72 70 70 75 287
Jason Day (41) $68,000 67 74 71 75 287
Morgan Hoffmann (41) $68,000 73 72 72 70 287
Webb Simpson (41) $68,000 69 75 72 71 287
Steve Stricker (41) $68,000 73 73 73 68 287
Sangmoon Bae (36) $54,000 74 71 72 71 288
Jamie Donaldson (36) $54,000 74 71 76 67 288
Chris Kirk (36) $54,000 72 73 72 71 288
Brooks Koepka (36) $54,000 74 71 71 72 288
Ryan Palmer (36) $54,000 69 74 74 71 288
Seung Yul Noh (30) $40,000 70 74 72 73 289
Charl Schwartzel (30) $40,000 71 70 73 75 289
Adam Scott (30) $40,000 72 69 74 74 289
John Senden (30) $40,000 71 74 72 72 289
Cameron Tringale (30) $40,000 71 75 69 74 289
Jimmy Walker (30) $40,000 73 72 74 70 289
Bubba Watson (30) $40,000 71 71 73 74 289
Danny Willett $40,000 71 71 76 71 289
Matt Kuchar (25) $30,000 72 74 72 72 290
Lee Westwood (25) $30,000 73 73 70 74 290
Geoff Ogilvy (23) $27,400 74 70 73 74 291
Jason Dufner (22) $25,600 74 71 74 73 292
Anirban Lahiri $25,600 71 75 74 72 292
Erik Compton (20) $24,600 73 72 74 74 293
Darren Clarke $23,800 74 71 77 72 294
Graeme McDowell (19) $23,800 71 74 76 73 294
Vijay Singh (17) $23,200 75 70 79 71 295
Thongchai Jaidee $23,000 75 70 80 72 297

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