Jordan Spieth’s Wild 2017 Open Championship at Royal Birkdale: A Beginner’s Story
Written by Paul Hodowanic • 12 Min Read • 3D AGO (recent news)
What Is This About?
Imagine a golf tournament so crazy that a whole town in England basically froze to watch one man. This is the story of Jordan Spieth and his unforgettable win at the 2017 Open Championship, played at a golf course called Royal Birkdale.
Important Point: The Open Championship is one of golf’s four “major” tournaments. Winning it is a huge deal!
Where and When Did This Happen?
- Place: Southport, a small seaside town in northwest England.
- Course: Royal Birkdale (a famous British golf links).
- Time: A rainy summer Sunday in 2017.
- The vibe: For 22 minutes and 20 seconds, the town stood still while Spieth figured out a crazy situation on hole 13.
Who Is Jordan Spieth?
- A professional golfer often called “The Golden Child.”
- Known for wild, risky shots and great saving skills.
- Before 2017, he had a tough moment: he lost a big lead at the 2016 Masters (another major).
Important Point: Less than two years earlier, Spieth led the 2016 Masters by 5 shots, then lost it all in about an hour. That was his first big scar.
The Setup: How Spieth Got to the Crazy Moment
Here is what happened before the madness:
- Thursday (Round 1): Spieth shot a clean 65 (no bogeys) and shared the lead.
- Friday (Round 2): Bad weather, but he shot 69 and led by 2.
- Saturday (Round 3): Another 65, leading by 3 total.
- Sunday morning: Matt Kuchar was 3 shots behind; no one else within 5.
Then Sunday’s final round started, and things went wobbly.
The Rough Start on Sunday
- Waiting to play last on major Sunday is super stressful.
- The first hole at Royal Birkdale is hard: out-of-bounds on the right, wind blowing left to right.
- Spieth’s ball curved left, bounced off a hump, and landed in tall grass (fescue). Bogey.
- He three-putted (used 3 putts) on holes 3 and 4. More bogeys.
- After 3 great days, his lead was gone. He was tied with Kuchar by hole 13.
Important Point: Spieth said he felt pressure because people might compare him again to the 2016 Masters collapse.
The 13th Hole: 22 Minutes of Pure Chaos
This is “The Moment.” Here is what went down step by step:
- The drive: Spieth hit the ball far right—so far that officials didn’t even think it could go out of bounds.
- Lost ball mystery: Fans thought it landed in grass near the fairway. It actually hit a spectator in the head and bounced behind sand dunes.
- Unplayable spot: The ball sat on a steep bank, 100 yards right of the fairway.
- Options?
- Re-tee (hit again from start): likely double bogey.
- Drop near ball: stuck in thick stuff.
- Drop on the driving range behind him? Maybe!
- Rules surprise: The range was in bounds by mistake (nobody thought anyone could hit that far). Spieth dropped there, took 1 penalty stroke, and got free relief from equipment trucks.
- The show: Spieth climbed dunes, talked fast with officials, while Kuchar waited. Rory McIlroy made eagle ahead; Brooks Koepka faded.
- The save: Caddie Michael Greller said it was 230 yards (not 270). Spieth hit a 3-iron, nearly to green, and bogey saved. Felt like momentum!
Important Point: This wild 13th-hole escape is now legendary. Spieth turned disaster into a small win.
How He Won the Tournament
After the 13th, Spieth turned it on:
- Hole 14 (par 3): Near-ace with 6-iron → birdie, tied with Kuchar.
- Hole 15 (par 5): 50-foot eagle putt! He said to caddie, “Go get that.” BBC announcer: “Almost beyond belief.”
- Holes 16 & 17: Long birdie putts (over 20 feet). Kuchar played last 5 holes in 1-under; Spieth in 5-under.
- Result: Won by 3 strokes—the same lead he started the day with. His 3rd major, 1st Open.
Important Point: Spieth called it “as much of a high as I’ve ever experienced in my golfing life.”
Remembering Spieth Today
- Now age 32, he shows flashes but not as often.
- He had a wrist injury for ~10 years, had surgery in late 2025, says he’s healthy.
- 2026 struggle: no top-10 finish; one part of game fails each week.
- Since 2017 Open: only 2 wins, not top 15 in world ranking.
Important Point: The 2017 Open was his peak. Can he star again? Maybe—crazier things happened at Royal Birkdale.
Summary
Jordan Spieth’s 2017 Open at Royal Birkdale was a rollercoaster: he lost his lead, survived a 22-minute rules adventure on hole 13, then won with eagle and birdies. It remains one of golf’s most amazing comebacks and a symbol of his career high.
FAQ
Q: What is a bogey?
A: A bogey means you finished a hole one stroke worse than the expected number (par). It’s like missing the goal by one.
Q: What is a major championship?
A: Golf has four super-important yearly tournaments. The Open is one. Winning makes you a legend.
Q: Why was the driving range drop allowed?
A: Officials never made the range “out of bounds” because they didn’t think anyone could hit there. By rule, Spieth could drop in line with the hole.
Q: Who is Matt Kuchar?
A: The player who was behind Spieth and played steady, but Spieth’s finish was too hot to catch.
Q: Will Spieth be that good again?
A: He says he’s healthy and focused on 5 years. Fans hope another magic Sunday comes.