SILVIS, Ill. — It's not hard to find some flaws in Jordan Spieth's historic win at the John Deere Classic.
Sure, most of the world's top golfers were a continent away preparing for Muirfield and this week's British Open. And yes, even Spieth knows luck was one of the major reasons why he became the first teenager in over eight decades to win on the PGA Tour.
Spieth's ascension, however, isn't a fluke.
The 19-year-old Texan simply affirmed why many view him as one of the world's most promising young golfers.
Spieth rallied from as many as seven shots down Sunday and took down Zach Johnson — a Masters winner and a defending champion playing in his hometown event — to notch his first career PGA Tour win in a grueling five-hole, three-man playoff.
He did it by thinking like a kid — and playing like a future star.
"This is my view on it, which is a 19-year-old's view, so don't hold me to it in a few years. But my view on it is you want to approach it the same way I approach being in contention in a college event," said Spieth, just a year removed from a one-and-done career with the Longhorns that he finished as an All-American. "If you start thinking ahead, you start thinking Augusta, you start thinking playoffs, you start thinking winning, it's difficult."
It's hard to not start thinking ahead to the Masters, the FedEx Cup and more victories for Spieth after his run through the par-71 TPC Deere Run.