WINDERMERE, Fla. — Jordan Spieth and Tiger Woods head into the winter break going in different directions.
Spieth wishes the new year could start tomorrow.
Woods is glad it doesn't.
Spieth capped off a worldwide, whirlwind finish to his second year as a pro by smashing two records at the Hero World Challenge with a performance that was reminiscent of what Woods once was capable of doing. Staked to a seven-shot lead going into the final round, Spieth quickly stretched it to 10 shots and left the rest of this world-class field playing for second at Isleworth.
Consider his last three weeks on three continents.
Spieth finished one shot out of a playoff in the Dunlop Phoenix in Japan, with his agent serving as a caddie that week. He flew to Sydney and closed with a 63 to win the Australian Open by six shots. And then he flew home to Dallas for one day, arrived in Florida and won by 10 in the final event of the year.
"In general, this was the best that I've ever played, which is what I said in a media center in Sydney last week," Spieth said. "I played better this week. This is the best I've played. Hopefully, I'll look back and continue to grow off this week."
Spieth finished at 26-under 262, breaking the tournament record of 266 set by Woods in 2007 and Davis Love III in 2000, both at Sherwood Country Club in California. His 10-shot victory over Henrik Stenson of Sweden was the largest margin of the year, and broke the tournament mark of seven that Woods set in 2007.