AUGUSTA, GA. – Jordan Spieth's opponents aren't sure whether they'd rather beat him or adopt him.
"He's just the most magnificent little guy," said Ernie Els.
"I need to buy a tape recorder that just says, 'Nice hole, Jordan,' " said Billy Horschel.
Horschel would have needed extra batteries Thursday, when the nice kid played enough nice holes to shoot a 64, one off the Masters record, to take a three-shot lead after the first round.
"I joked with him that Amen Corner should be 'Jordan's Corner,' " Horschel said. "I think the guy even called a bank shot off one of the trees."
Spieth is the third-youngest player to win multiple tour events, ranking behind Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia. He's still 21, matching the number of Masters in which Els has competed.
He's played 13 consecutive rounds under par, has made it his goal to become the world's top-ranked player, is threatening to turn the 2015 Masters into a four-day group hug, and yet he seems so … average?
When young, Woods and Garcia announced their presences with flamboyant play and fearsome power.