AUGUSTA, GA. -- Before he dug up a pelt of grass the size of a green jacket on Sunday last year, no one had ever mastered The Masters as quickly as Jordan Spieth.
He walked to the 12th tee with a five-shot lead. He was at that moment 30-under in his three Masters tournaments and was threatening to become the fourth player ever to win the tournament in consecutive years.
As Spieth strolled over from the 11th green, the gallery swelled as the large group of fans who had been following him joined those packed into Augusta National's most famous cul-de-sac, also known as Amen Corner.
Spieth had birdied the last four holes of the front nine but bogeyed the 10th and 11th. There was a sense of coronation mixed with foreboding as Spieth launched his tee shot.
The ball sliced to the right, bounced on the bank and slid back into Rae's Creek. Spieth took a drop, then made one of the worst swings by a leader in the history of major golf, a swing that should have belonged to Jean Van de Velde, not the game's presumptive prince.
Spieth's wedge dug up a tract of land. His ball barely made it to the front of the creek. Spieth dropped again and his next shot landed in the back bunker.
There have been many important missed shots at 12 but perhaps never before had a leader and major champion looked so amateurish there. Spieth wrote a ``7'' on his scorecard and lost a tournament he had been dominating to Danny Willett, who has no other PGA Tour victories.
Even given that collapse, Spieth has adapted to Augusta National as if he sleeps on pine straw and breakfasts on pimiento cheese. He has finished tied for second, first and tied for second.