For the first time in six months, Jordan Spieth is set to tee it up in a PGA Tour event. Making his season debut at the 2025 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the 13-time winner returns to the Monterey Peninsula on Thursday with a healthy left wrist and a healthy long-term mindset about his prospects in his corner.
Returning from injury, Jordan Spieth has simple short-term goals that he hopes will allow him to achieve one lofty long-term aspiration.
PEBBLE BEACH — Jordan Spieth, the inaugural recipient of The Legacy, a new award presented in conjunction with the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, probably deserves another award for how to accept an award.
Some things are worth the wait. The post Seen With No Bandages, Jordan Spieth Reveals His Wake-Up Call to Pursue His Halted PGA Tour Dreams appeared first on EssentiallySports.
Jordan Spieth tweaked his swing to eliminate "bad habits," and now has full confidence and trust in it as he returns to the PGA Tour after wrist surgery. The post ‘Felt like a big, big shift:’ Jordan Spieth details swing change post surgery appeared first on Golf.
Scottie Scheffler and Jordan Spieth will make their first starts in the 2025 PGA Tour season at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Until now, they have been out with different ailments: Scheffler will be trying to play through a hand injury he suffered during the holiday break, while Spieth will be making his first start after wrist surgery.
After having surgery on his left wrist, Jordan Spieth took advice from other athletes — “no one's ever come back too late from a surgery” — and decided to wait. He returns this week at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. The road to a responsible recovery was a laborious five months, but one that Spieth enjoyed.
PEBBLE BEACH — Jordan Spieth is the boy wonder no more. Spieth burst onto the PGA Tour with a flourish. He turned pro at 19, pocketed his first win before he turned 20, won five times in the year in which he turned 22 (including two majors) and collected 11 victories before his 24th birthday.
Rory McIlroy made a splash on his return to the PGA Tour, making his second career hole-in-one with a slam dunk ace while playing his opening round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am
USA TODAY Sports The United States Open has been played since 1895, but an American player didn’t win the title until 1911. Since then, American golfers have won the event with regularity. Here are the players from the states who have been crowned champions.
Jordan Spieth tweaked his swing to eliminate "bad habits," and now has full confidence and trust in it as he returns to the PGA Tour.