Jordan Spieth admitted he would not play his now infamous shot from the cliff edge at Pebble Beach again this year – with course officials having to make adjustments to that area to prevent regular golfers from attempting to replicate Spieth’s effort from last year.
Spieth almost hit his ball off the cliff on the par-four eighth hole at Pebble Beach in last year’s AT&T Pro-Am, before almost going off the cliff himself when he controversially opted to fire a shot right over to the green with his left foot worryingly close to the edge.
Spieth ignored the pleas of his caddie Michael Greller to step away from the edge and take a penalty drop and instead hammered a seven iron over to the green – immediately having to jump backwards to avoid disaster from striking if he went off balance.
It saved a shot as Spieth, being Spieth, made a very Spieth-like par, but having been back to that spot 12 months later, and with now full knowledge of what might have happened, Spieth admitted he would not make the same decision now.
“This is downright terrifying right now.” This shot from Jordan Spieth was quite the situation. 😬 pic.twitter.com/sq04R96GXQFebruary 5, 2022
“I think I saved a stroke. Does the reward outweigh the risk? Not if you think the risk was dying,” Spieth said ahead of the tournament this year.
“But I also, I felt I could whack it over the water with a seven-iron and get it up near the green. And, yeah, I think now knowing my son a lot better, he was really young at the time, I may not have hit that shot.
“Yeah, it’s not advised. I’m glad I ended up making a four. Because if I made a five it would have been one of the worse decisions I ever made. Instead it was just a bad decision.”
Bad decisions are what amateur golfers do best most of the time, and plenty have been taking a look at ‘that’ spot on the eighth and some even trying to replicate Spieth’s dangerous shot – leading to Pebble Beach to altering that area.
The PGA Tour’s chief referee Gary Young the told ESPN that Pebble Beach had been forced to move the painted red hazard line further back than usual to make sure the rough was thick enough to stop golf balls ending up where Spieth’s did – and tempting amateurs to take on the shot.
“We painted the line where we traditionally have it,” Young said. “I know that as a club, they make a concerted effort to try to move that line further away.
“Resort play, that’s been their concern, and they just want to make sure…
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