Two ‘favorite sons,’ Jordan Spieth and Jason Day, return to 2024 John Deere Classic after lengthy absences

Spieth and Day are both hoping that the friendly confines of TPC Deere Run will spark their games.

Clair Peterson has waited a long time to welcome back what he called “two favorite sons.”

Peterson, the former tournament director of the John Deere Classic, once wooed a pair of teens – one a newly-minted 17-year-old pro from Australia and the other an 18-year-old member of the national championship-winning University of Texas team – to the northwestern corner of the Land of Lincoln and Silvis, Illinois, one of the cities referred to in these parts as the Quad Cities.

Jason Day, the Aussie, made his PGA Tour debut here in 2006 and cashed his first Tour check – for $8,200 – while Jordan Spieth, the Texan amateur, arrived in the summer of 2012 and went home with something every bit as valuable as money – confirmation his game was Tour ready.

Day came back five consecutive years, finishing T-5 twice, but hasn’t returned since 2011; Spieth won the title in 2013 and 2015 but hasn’t been back either. Peterson spoke to their various camps every year and made his pitch, even whispering sweet nothings in their ears on the range at Torrey Pines in San Diego in January 2022 that the tournament that July would be his 20th and final year as tournament director.

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“Jordan was so gracious but I kind of felt like even at that point they had his schedule together and it wouldn’t work out,” Peterson said.

Day agreed to play in 2022 but ended up withdrawing before the tournament began citing a back injury. Peterson never took rejection personally as Day and Spieth both won majors among their 13 Tour titles and each reached world No. 1.

“It’s tough, once you’re getting into all the majors and the signature events, you can play all over the world, it’s tough to build a schedule and include our event,” Peterson said. “But here they are this year coming back and recognizing that we gave them a spot, it’s exciting to have them here and that’s the value of the relationships, I think. There’s no expiration date on ’em.”

Spieth has been absent for nine years, but his victories are part of the tournament highlight reel that still play regularly in Peterson’s head. Competing on a sponsor invite as a pro in 2013, Spieth holed a bunker shot on 18 in the final round that got him into a three-man playoff with David Hearn and Zach Johnson.

“It was one of the biggest roars that I ever heard,” Peterson recalled.

Jordan Spieth defeated Tom Gillis in a playoff to win the 2015 John Deere Classic.

Spieth prevailed in a five-hole playoff, becoming the first teenager to win on the Tour since Ralph Guldahl in 1931. One year later, he came back for the pre-tournament media day and Peterson invited him to try to replicate the bunker shot. Spieth grabbed his sand wedge and three golf balls and jumped at the chance.

“He took one swing to gauge the sand. We didn’t count that one,” Peterson said. “And then what does he do? He went and sank the god-dog thing.”

Spieth finished T-7 in his 2014 title defense. One year later, Spieth won the Masters and the U.S. Open, giving him a chance at the British Open, held the week after the John Deere Classic at the time, to match Ben Hogan in 1953 and win the first three legs of the Grand Slam. The sentiment of the day was that Spieth should skip visiting America’s Heartland and get acclimated to the time change in Scotland and links golf for his best odds at making history. Spieth thought otherwise and honored his commitment to play — his agent, Jay Danzi, confirmed in a text to Peterson that he’d need three seats on the flight across the pond that the tournament always arranges for players heading to the British Open.

“It meant everything for him to come back against all the best advice,” Peterson said. “As far as I’m concerned he paid his dues for what we did for him in 2012 and 2013.”

Spieth won the 2015 John Deere Classic in another playoff – this time over Tom Gillis – and finished a shot out of a playoff in a tie for fourth with Day at the 2015 British Open, which was won by Johnson, who happened to be on the flight from the JDC with Spieth. Even more than Johnson, an Iowa native, past champion and unofficial tournament ambassador, and three-time champ Steve Stricker, who played collegiately at Illinois, Spieth was the player that Peterson was asked about most often when he made his rounds to drum up interest in the tournament. It’s taken nearly a decade for Spieth to defend his 2015 John Deere Classic title.

“Everyone can’t wait,” said Peterson, who plans to be there both as a fan and a volunteer this year. “They had $35,000 in ticket sales within a couple of hours after the announcement was made.”

Spieth and Day are both hoping that the friendly confines of TPC Deere Run, where they’ve both experienced past success, will spark their game. Day, who is ranked No. 28 in the FedEx Cup, has recorded just one top-10 finish in his last 11 starts while Spieth, who is No. 59 in the season-long standings, had failed to register a top 10 in his last nine starts.

The tournament also features its usual crop of promising stars, including Michael Thorbjornsen, who earned a full Tour card for finishing first in PGA Tour U, Luke Clanton, a 20-year-old Florida State University product who finished T-10 last week at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, and sponsor exemptions for Neal Shipley, a recent Ohio State grad, who finished as low amateur at the Masters and U.S. Open, and Jackson Buchanan, the reigning Big 10 men’s individual champ. Peterson compared choosing a sponsor’s invite to the process of selecting an initial public offering in the stock market with hopes of a return on investment.

“There’s no promise that there’s going to be success,” Peterson said, “but you try to do your homework and identify guys in this case that are going to be successful as athletes.”

In the case of Day and Spieth, those picks still are paying dividends all these years later.

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“You try to do your homework and identify guys in this case that were going to be successful as athletes.”

The corn fields adjacent to John Deere headquarters in Silvis, Illinois, typically are knee-high by the 4th of July. That’s how Webb Simpson remembers them as he returns to this northwestern corner of the Land of Lincoln for the first time in a dozen years to play at TPC Deere Run in the PGA Tour’s John Deere Classic, which is celebrating its 50th edition.

Simpson, winner of the 2012 U.S. Open among his seven Tour titles, is back in America’s Heartland to pay a debt of gratitude to longtime tournament director Clair Peterson, who is retiring this year, and gave him a sponsor’s exemption in 2008.

“I was elated because there’s so many uncertainties when you turn pro as a young player,” said Simpson, who graduate from Wake Forest that summer. “You don’t know which tour you’re going to be playing on, if any tour.”

The John Deere Classic grew in meaning to Simpson when he returned to the Quad Cities to compete a year later as a rookie and proposed to his wife, Dowd, the mother of his five children, the night before the final round.

“She knew the question was coming in the next few months, so I thought I’m going to get her when she least expects it,” he said. “Decided right by the river’s a beautiful area, I can take her to dinner, I can surprise her.”

Simpson’s caddie secured the ring and he dropped to one knee on a dock along the Mississippi River, which divides Bettencourt and Davenport, Iowa, and Moline and Rock Island, Illinois.

“I was more nervous about dropping it than her saying yes,” said Simpson, who claimed to be 99 percent sure she would say yes.

Fast forward to March at the Valspar Championship and Simpson told Peterson to count him in for his farewell tournament. With the pre-tournament withdrawal of Daniel Berger due to injury, Simpson, at No. 58 in the Official World Golf Ranking, represents the highest-ranked player in the field, but he downplayed any talk that he should be the favorite.

“A hundred guys could win this week,” Simpson said. “Just because the field isn’t as strong as other weeks it’s still going to take a really low number(to win).”

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With the tournament going up against the second event of LIV Golf, the upstart league that has wooed the likes of Brooks Koepka, Dustin Johnson and former JDC champion Bryson DeChambeau, and scheduled between the U.S. Open and British Open, Peterson knew his event would be a tough draw.

“How many major winners do you have here compared to John Deere? It’s not even close,” said Pat Perez, a defector to the renegade LIV Golf. “The Tour wants to keep talking about strength of field and all that kind of stuff, the strength of field is here.”

To make matters worse for Peterson and the John Deere, several of the biggest stars in the game are heading next week to the Genesis Scottish Open, an event co-sanctioned between the PGA Tour and DP World Tour for the first time, which certainly had a detrimental effect, too. But none of this is new for an event that has rolled with the punches.

“I like to say we hit for the cycle,” Peterson said. “We’ve been opposite the British Open, we’ve been opposite the Olympics, we’ve been opposite the Ryder Cup and we’ve been opposite the Presidents Cup. So, our history is not always to have the top-10 players in the world here.”

What Peterson has excelled at is finding the stars of tomorrow and offering them sponsor exemptions into the field.

“I’ve kind of compared it, I guess, to an IPO, where there’s an initial public offering of this new product and there’s no promise that there’s going to be success,” Peterson said, “but you try to do your homework and identify guys in this case that were going to be successful as athletes, but quite honestly we also were really focused on young men that we liked and respected and had a lot of regard for.”

Jordan Spieth
Jordan Spieth holds the winner’s check after winning a three-way, five-hole sudden death playoff at the John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run on July 14, 2013 in Silvis, Illinois. (Photo: Michael Cohen-Getty Images)

Among those who benefited from a JDC invite include defending champion Lucas Glover, Jon Rahm and DeChambeau, who all later won U.S. Opens; past champ Jordan Spieth (three majors in all), Zach Johnson (two majors) and Patrick Reed, who all won green jackets; Justin Thomas, who just won his second PGA Championship, and Jason Day, who also won the Wanamaker, and is in the field this week.

“We gave him a spot as a 17-year old. He made his first check here,” Peterson said of Day, who returned five times. “Then he becomes No. 1 in the world. And it’s tough, once you’re getting into all the majors and the World Golf Championships, you can play all over the world, it’s tough to build a schedule and include our event…But here he is this year to come back and recognize that we gave him a spot, it’s exciting to have him here and that’s the value of the relationships, I think. There’s no expiration date on ’em.”

Peterson pointed out that for all his success with sponsor invites, his record isn’t perfect.

“I’m going to give you a true confession right now, because people have said, ‘Oh, wow, you know, you do a great job picking exemptions.’ I said no to Scottie Scheffler, OK? So don’t give me too much credit. That’s one that really kind of was a whiff. But I think he’s going to do OK.”

This year the list of those Peterson awarded golden tickets to includes Chris Gotterup, the Haskins Award winner as men’s college golfer of the year, Quinn Riley, a Black golfer who played at Duke, and Patrick Flavin, an Illinois native who grew up attending the tournament.

“It’s a dream come true,” Flavin said. “The John Deere Classic to me was always a major. It was a really big deal. Watching guys like Zach Johnson and Steve Stricker win, guys from the Midwest who aren’t overpowering people and I’m kind of a small guy, it was really inspiring to me.”

So is the local support for the tournament and the charity dollars it has raised – $145 million.

“To me that’s a success,” Peterson said. “You can’t judge the success of the tournament just by the strength of the field.”

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