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Spieth won his first major at the 2015 Masters Tournament with a score of 270 (−18), earning him $1.8 million. Spieth tied the 72-hole record set by Tiger Woods in 1997 and became the second youngest to win the Masters, behind Woods. He then won the 2015 U.S. Open with a final score of 5-under-par. He is the youngest U.S. Open champion since Bobby Jones in 1923. He followed up with a win in the 2015 Tour Championship, which clinched the 2015 FedEx Cup.
Speech turned professional in 2012 and since then has won 7 PGA TOURS, 1 PGA TOUR OF AUSTRALASIA TOUR AND 1 OTHER TOUR.
Spieth won the U.S. Junior
Amateur in 2009 and 2011, joining Tiger Woods as its only
multiple winners. Before turning 18 in July 2011, he was No. 1 in the Polo Golf
Rankings, which promotes the best junior golfers in the world. He finished
second in the 2008 and 2009 Junior PGA Championship. The American
Junior Golf Association named him the Rolex Junior Player of the
Year in 2009.
Spieth accepted an exemption to play in the PGA Tour's HP Byron
Nelson Championship in 2010. It was the event's
first amateur exemption since 1995. The tournament's previous exemptions had
included Trip Kuehne
in 1995, Justin
Leonard, and Woods in 1993. He made the cut, becoming the
sixth-youngest player to make the cut at a PGA Tour event. Spieth was tied for
seventh place after the third round, and finished the tournament in a tie for
16th place. He was offered another exemption into the tournament in 2011, when he
again made the cut and finished in a tie for 32nd.
Spieth played college golf for the Longhorns at the University of
Texas. Spieth was a member of the 2011 Walker Cup team, and
played in three of the four rounds, halving his foursomes match and
winning both singles matches.
In his freshman year at Texas, Spieth won three events and led the team
in scoring average. He helped his team win the NCAA
championship, was named to the All-Big 12 Team, Big 12
Freshman of the Year and Player of the Year, and was a first-team All-American.
Spieth earned a spot in the U.S. Open in 2012
as an alternate after Brandt
Snedeker withdrew; he tied for 21st and was the low amateur. He
became the number one amateur in the World Amateur
Golf Ranking after his performance in the U.S. Open and Patrick Cantlay's decision
to turn professional.
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