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Rusty, testy Jordan Spieth misses the cut at TPC after Masters collapse

Jordan Spieth chips onto the 16th green during the resumption of the second round Saturday morning.

Jordan Spieth chips onto the 16th green during the resumption of the second round Saturday morning.

(Richard Heathcote / Getty Images)
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A four-week break did not cure Jordan Spieth’s Masters hangover, it prolonged it.

For two rounds at TPC Sawgrass, Spieth still was not himself four weeks removed from a final-round collapse last month at Augusta National that cost him a second straight green jacket.

Spieth could not overcome a rusty game and testy demeanor this week to miss the cut by a stroke, finishing 1-under par 143 total.

More than anything, the 22-year-old’s trusty putter betrayed him.

Spieth, who rode his flatstick to wins at the Masters and U.S. Open in 2015, finished 122nd in the 144-player field in strokes gained putting. Spieth needed 59 putts, while playing partner and 36-hole leader Jason Day needed 48 and bested Spieth by 14 strokes.

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“If I putt anywhere up to the standard I normally putt, even with a couple of bad breaks here and there, and I’m 6- or 7-under,” Spieth said. “Everybody has an off putting week. I just had a couple of days where I just kind of lost a little control of it.”

Spieth said he also lost control of his emotions at times.

It didn’t help Day did not make a bogey for 36 holes, while Spieth made six, as well as a double-bogey.

“In the off days, I just need to do a little better job of being positive with myself and smiling a bit more, having a bit more fun,” he said. “And it’s tough when you’re getting shellacked by 15 shots in the same group, you know? When someone’s birdieing almost every single hole, every other hole, you start to wonder why in the world you aren’t making any of them.”

Spieth planned to return to Dallas to work on his game for next week’s AT&T Byron Nelson in Irving, Texas, a Dallas suburb.

As a 16-year-old, Spieth burst onto the scene at the 2010 Byron Nelson, ending the third round in a tie for seventh on his way to a tie for 16th place. It remains Spieth’s best finish there in five appearances.

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“I’ll go back home, where I can hopefully gain some momentum there,” Spieth said. “That’s an event that, growing up, I’ve always wanted to win and haven’t really had a chance since I was 16, 17.

“It’s funny when I say that.”

Fowler out

Spieth was not the only top player without his best stuff at TPC.

Defending champion Rickie Fowler, a week after he held the 54-hole lead at Quail Hollow, missed the cut by a shot, as did 2007 Players champion Phil Mickelson and reigning Masters winner Danny Willett.

World No. 6 Henrik Stenson of Lake Nona missed the weekend by eight shots.

Other notables to miss the cut were No. 12 Patrick Reed and No. 16 Brandt Snedeker. Ten of the top 25 players in the world missed the cut. World No. 21 Charl Schwartzel did not play.

Wilcox reversal

Will Wilcox put on a show on the par-three 17th hole Friday. A day later, he came crashing back to earth.

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Wilcox was the first to play the iconic island green hole during the third round. A day earlier, he became the first player since 2002 to make an ace there, and immediately cut loose with a wild celebration involving his caddie, playing partners and fans.

Facing a 129-yard shot Saturday, Wilcox found the water, coming up short of the green by 10 yards. He made a double-bogey five on his way to a miserable 10-over 82, tied with Patton Kizzire for the day’s high round.

But Wilcox’s struggles on No. 17 were not to be outdone.

Russell Knox arrived at the hole eight under for the week and on the fringe of contention. He then hit three balls in the water on his to a sextuple-bogey nine — tied for the fourth-highest score on the infamous hole.

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