Jordan Spieth still takes '10, 15 minutes' to get his wrist loose every morning

SAN ANTONIO — When Golfweek caught up with Jordan Spieth last fall, the former World No. 1 was fresh off wrist surgery, and he divulged a detailed timeline of how he envisioned his return to play and then, hopefully, to the top of leaderboards. Spieth said he planned to return to the PGA Tour on Jan. 1, a bold statement since the three-time major champion had wrist surgery in late August after an early elimination from the FedEx Cup Playoffs.

It didn't take long for the University of Texas product to execute on that timeline, as evidenced by his T-4 at the WM Phoenix Open in just his second tournament back. He added a top-10 showing at the Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches a few weeks later and he's now made the cut in six of the seven events he's played, including this week at the Texas Valero Open.

He was a little miffed with his finish Friday at TPC San Antonio, where he posted a 38 on the back nine to fall off the first page of the leaderboard. Spieth is still in the mix at 4 under through 36 holes, and he's looking to add a second title at the event to the one he captured back in 2021.

But while his performance has been impressive, Spieth admits life post-surgery has been different, a reminder he receives every morning.

"I wake up in the morning and my wrists do not feel the same, comparably," Spieth said on Friday, just a bit before joining Smylie Kaufman for a special TV segment that included Jack Nicklaus. "My left wrist, just to close my fingers, it feels like it's twice the size, but after 10, 15 minutes, it's fine. It doesn't hurt, it's not sore, it just is so tight every morning after sleeping. So I think I'm a little surprised that that's staying that way.

"But I'm also pleasantly surprised at the performance from my first event at Pebble. I had a couple shots in the first round where I was like, oh, no. Just bunker shots, flop shots. I've had the occasional one here or there since, but I get in thick rough or I get in shots where there's rocks around, whatever, and I'm thinking the same way I thought before I had surgery, so I'm very pleasantly surprised at that."

Apr 4, 2025; San Antonio, Texas, USA; Jordan Spieth watches his shot on the eleventh tee during the second round of the Valero Texas Open golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images

After rocketing near the top early in the day with a pair of birdies, Spieth dropped a bit down the stretch on Friday with bogeys on two of his last three holes. And in the middle, he was frustrated after missing a 6-foot birdie putt.

It clearly stuck with the 13-time PGA Tour winner, whose last victory came at the RBC Heritage in 2022.

"I've got to get better at closing these rounds out on Fridays," he said. "I had the same problem happen in Tampa (at Valspar). It's not like a trend or anything, they just were random things each day, and this one happened to be misjudging chips which is normally a specialty of mine. I'm just a little, you know, how do you feel when you're on a bad run of cards and like, man. On the last hole, I'm like surely this is going to jump a little bit and run and then that one spins. Like I just never would have guessed it would spin. Misjudging them stinks."

But minor blips aside, Spieth is back to doing what he does best — wowing crowds with a creativity that's second ...

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