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Prep School
DAMON HACK
June 07, 2010
With its big-time feel and code of conduct, the American Junior Golf Association is developing young golfers for the college game—and beyond
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June 07, 2010

Prep School

With its big-time feel and code of conduct, the American Junior Golf Association is developing young golfers for the college game—and beyond

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It's the night before the Thunderbird International Junior, the big kahuna of the American Junior Golf Association season, and Jordan Spieth is in a banquet hall, hopping up and down on his right leg. "Simon says, 'Pat your head,'" shouts one of the tournament emcees, and the 16-year-old Spieth and 77 other junior golfers are hopping and patting, hopping and patting, the boys decked out in orange shirts, the girls in pink. Through the banquet hall's picture windows, the sunset view of the Raptor course at Grayhawk Golf Club in Scottsdale, Ariz., is breathtaking, even if it is partly obscured by air hockey, Ping-Pong and Foosball tables. The boys' defending champion, Daniel Lee, who went 18 under par in the 54-hole event last year, has selected a scrumptious menu this evening: Caesar salad with tortilla chips, two slabs of steak, green beans, a twice-baked potato and chocolate cake with strawberries. The champions dinner at the Masters has nothing on these kids. "Hop on your left leg!" says the emcee, and Jordan switches feet, eliminating him and all of the guys at his table, a group of kids in the midst of raging hormones, high school exams and, in Spieth's case, a whirlwind that a week ago included a star turn at the PGA Tour's Byron Nelson Championship, in which he finished 16th, received boisterous ovations before hometown crowds and had his baby face beamed around the globe. "Thursday at the Nelson, my first tee shot was by far the most nervous I'd ever been doing anything in my life," Spieth says. "Second would be asking someone to prom."

After the Nelson, Spieth squeezed in four days of classes at Dallas Jesuit High, where he is a junior, before flying without his parents to Phoenix to compete in the Thunderbird, which is played on a course that has hosted Tour events. Friends and strangers kept asking Spieth if he would feel a letdown after the big crowds and the caddie and the final-round pairing with U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin at the Nelson. Spieth said he wouldn't. His reason was the Thunderbird's deep field—players such as Grayson Murray, 16, from Raleigh, who made the cut at the Nationwide tour's Rex Hospital Open the same week Spieth was playing at the Nelson; Andrew Knox, 17, from Cary, N.C., who played at the Rex a year ago, missing the cut by three shots; and globetrotting junior golfers from Great Britain, Australia, China and Argentina, among others.

"I feel that at least half the field here would have no problem making the cut over 50 percent of the time in a PGA Tour event," Spieth says. "That's a pretty bold statement, but based on what I saw [at the Nelson]—and I played with guys who are veterans, and I played with the guy who was leading after the first two rounds—I still believe that. This field could compete out there."

When Tiger Woods turned pro in 1996, Spieth and most of the golfers at the Thunderbird were infants, and a few hadn't been born, but Tiger's influence on their games and on the AJGA is undeniable. Beyond 300-yard tee shots (the norm) and workout regimens (the kids have those too), there is a sense that nothing in golf is out of reach anymore. In a year that has seen Woods's greatest turmoil off the course, so much on the course in 2010 circles back to him. Ryo Ishikawa's 58 in Japan. Rory McIlroy's 62 in Charlotte. Spieth's 68-69-67-72 in Irving. "When Tiger came on board 14 years ago, it changed the norm to, 'You can win every time you play,' and that's how these kids grew up," says University of Colorado men's golf coach Roy Edwards, who attended the Thunderbird to scout players. "Tiger is such a freak that it's not fair to say that a Jordan Spieth will be the same, but the mentality is there, the lack of fear, the high expectations."

Says Ollie Schniederjans, a 16-year-old from Powder Springs, Ga., "This new generation that came behind Tiger, most of us are working out, and that gives us an edge."

Any other advantages? "Fearless Golf," he says, naming one of his favorite books, written by Gio Valiante. "Everybody should read that."

Like their counterparts on the PGA and LPGA tours, the juniors needle each other, talk to their golf balls and occasionally gamble. On the final hole of their practice round last Friday, Spieth, Knox and Murray had a closest-to-the-pin contest from a tight lie in front of a greenside bunker. Spieth lofted his ball to a few feet and all but had to chase down Knox and Murray to collect his winnings. The take? A dollar apiece.

Even amid a few childhood touches—a cooler filled with ice cream bars by the 10th tee on Saturday afternoon, a glow-in-the-dark putting contest that night—there was no question that the golf was grown-up. (Phil Mickelson's old persimmon driver, which hangs in the men's locker room at Grayhawk, was another reminder to the kids of what a precocious golfing talent can lead to.) With the AJGA providing the tournament structure (the organization puts on 85 events in 30 states) and the Thunderbirds association helping to defray the cost of travel expenses, several parents were comfortable enough to send their children on their own. ("That 9:30 p.m. curfew is a great thing," says Spieth's dad, Shawn.) That way, the players could focus on the golf.

"It's the Number 1 thing in my life right now—I'd probably put it ahead of school," says Anthony Paolucci, 17, from Del Mar, Calif., who led after each of the first two rounds with scores of 66 and 69. "After school, I go practice. I work out three or four times a week. I have a physical therapist for deep-tissue massaging, and I have a chiropractor. You don't want to have an injury when you're 22, as much as we practice these days. I have a whole team working."

With volunteers on every hole and four giant leader boards sprinkled around the course, the Thunderbird had a Tour-like feel. Beyond running the tournaments, the AJGA enforces a code of conduct that bans club throwing and profanity. In another push toward character building, players are required to write thank you notes to the tournament sponsor, host facility and chairman after they sign their scorecards. The golfers who compete in the Junior Players Championship in September at TPC Sawgrass go through media training with the PGA Tour media relations department, further preparing them for the next level. Spieth is a bright light in a constellation of composed, confident kids.

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