AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Sammy Spieth, age 3, hit a better tee shot by his standards than playing partners Justin Thomas and Max Homa did by theirs on the second hole of the Par 3 Contest at the Masters. He teed up a driver, gripped it cross-handed and sent his ball about 30 yards down the middle, while Thomas and Homa hit their wedges short and right into a bunker.
Jordan Spieth’s 3-year-old son and 89-year-old Gary Player make memories at Masters Par 3 Contest
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Sammy Spieth, age 3, hit a better tee shot by his standards than playing partners Justin Thomas and Max Homa did by theirs on the second hole of the Par 3 Contest at the Masters. He teed up a driver, gripped it cross-handed and sent his ball about 30 yards down the middle, while Thomas and Homa hit their wedges short and right into a bunker.
Sammy’s dad, 2015 Masters champion Jordan Spieth, didn’t bother to tee off. He had enough to manage with a team of caddies - all wearing white Augusta National coveralls - that included Sammy, 1-year-old daughter Sophie and wife Annie, who is expecting a third child in July.
The record book will show that Masters rookie Nico Echavarria won the Par 3 on Wednesday, beating J.J. Spaun with a birdie on the second playoff hole after each shot 5-under 22. While the Masters is arguably the easiest major to win because of its small field that includes aging past champions, the Par 3 is much easier, because most players don’t even try.
Gary Player certainly does. The oldest living Masters champion at age 89, he made three straight birdies - flirting with aces on Nos. 6 and 7 - to get his name onto the leaderboard, although he ultimately didn’t post an official score.