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Bohls: This 35-year-old Aussie is hoping it might be his Day once again

Jason Day looks at a putt during the third round Friday at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play tournament at Austin Country Club. Day beat Collin Morikawa 4 and 3 to win his group and advance to the weekend's knockout stages.
Jason Day looks at a putt during the third round Friday at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play tournament at Austin Country Club. Day beat Collin Morikawa 4 and 3 to win his group and advance to the weekend's knockout stages.

Jason Day’s been around the block.

Several blocks, in fact.

At 35 years old, the mature native Australian admittedly didn’t always know what was coming next and doesn’t truly know now.

But he has come to grips with some uncertainty, is braced for it and, in fact, is welcoming it.

He calls it “an interesting journey.”

Rewarding, too. And not just because of $53 million in golf paydays.

The journey has taken him to the highest of highs with PGA Championship and Players Championship victories along with 10 others on the PGA Tour and has included a few lows, such as an extended time off with severe back pain and a long drought between wins that has grown to five years since the Wells Fargo Championship in 2018.

He’s a former No. 1-ranked golfer in the world. And he was as low as 175th in the rankings last October before climbing back to 37th.

He’s won this World Golf Championship-Dell Technologies Match Play event twice before, in 2014 and 2016, and he is in position to do so again after advancing from group play Friday by routing two-time major winner Collin Morikawa by a 4-and-3 margin.

Yet he had gone 0 for his last 4 tries, failing to advance out of the round-robin stage since his title.

Jason Day removes the flag stick for Collin Morikawa, center, on the fourth green Friday at Austin Country Club. Day, the 2015 PGA Championship winner, has been trying to rediscover his old successes.
Jason Day removes the flag stick for Collin Morikawa, center, on the fourth green Friday at Austin Country Club. Day, the 2015 PGA Championship winner, has been trying to rediscover his old successes.

He’s had 15 finishes in the top 10 in major championships, including four in the Masters, but he hasn’t captured a second major since that PGA title in 2015.

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That said, the highs greatly outnumber the lows, and his compelling journey might yet return him to golf’s mountaintop. He’s placed in the top 10 in four of his last five events, including a fifth at the Phoenix Open, as well as a tie for 19th at the Players.

“When I got to No. 1 in the world back in ’15, I enjoyed the journey getting there,” Day said, “but when I got there, I didn't know how I got there, which is interesting to say because I had a team of people around me that would just take care of everything. So they just kept the horse running, and I was just like, OK, I'm going to run in a straight line.”

This time, he said, he’s taken a different approach, and he’s happy with that decision.

He has spent a lifetime around golf — maybe two lifetimes — and likes where he’s been and where he’s headed.

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“At least I'll kind of have essentially an understanding of how things are,” he said, “and where they're going and where I want to be.”

He wants to be back in the winner’s circle. But he’s also adjusting to a swing change with coach Chris Como, and that’s taken awhile. He’s found himself uncomfortable over the ball too often but has played long enough to know it’s about getting it in the hole more than showing off for style points.

But his health is good, and his life balance is even better.

He feels awkward saying he’s not really in a groove, his 3-0 record notwithstanding. “I can’t fully let go,” he said.

He’s had only three bogeys in three rounds, including one Friday that was more than offset by six birdies. He’s completed his matches before ever reaching the 17th or 18th tee box.

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For now, he’s back in the knockout stage of the Dell event, where he will engage with match play wizard Matt Kuchar, who tied Tiger Woods with his 36th career victory in Match Play events by crushing Si Woo Kim 7 and 6.

“The guy is very straight down the middle, on the green,” Day said of Kuchar. “When he gets hot with a putter, then he’s very difficult to beat. So I kind of have to stay in my own little world tomorrow and just not pay too much attention to him.”

Jordan Spieth watches his chip to the green on the first hole Friday in his third-round match against Shane Lowry. Spieth, who hadn't looked comfortable all week, lost 2 and 1. Both golfers failed to get out of group play.
Jordan Spieth watches his chip to the green on the first hole Friday in his third-round match against Shane Lowry. Spieth, who hadn't looked comfortable all week, lost 2 and 1. Both golfers failed to get out of group play.

Much of the attention all week has been focused on current stars such as defending champion Scottie Scheffler, who took care of 17 seed Tom Kim to advance with a 3-0 record, and unbeaten No. 3 Rory McIlroy, who will stick around for weekend play and still has the Austin Country Club patrons buzzing over his drive on 18 Thursday that almost cleared the clubhouse.

Max Homa, who’s been on fire on the Tour, took the easiest route. His opponent, former Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama, withdrew from the competition with a neck sprain while Homa was still on the driving range before their tee time.

Jordan Spieth wasn’t so fortunate because his opponent, Shane Lowry, was a competitive pain in the neck.

Spieth (1-2) never got into any rhythm this week, and his chances of winning his adopted hometown event for the first time evaporated quickly on a Friday that offered heavy midmorning showers before clearing up with warming sunshine by afternoon. He got off to a disastrous start and trailed 5 down after eight holes.

He did make one of his patented charges with four birdies in his last six holes. But his eagle try on 16 came up 6 inches short, and Lowry won 2 and 1, though both failed to advance out of group play.

Of the 15 golfers who entered Friday’s pod play with 2-0 records, 12 of them, including defending Valero Open champion J.J. Spaun as the 61st seed, moved on into Saturday’s round of 16 with 3-0 marks.

Day was one of them as well as the 32nd seed, and no one should sleep on the personable but competitive guy, who has his own set of followers at ACC. He’s won this event twice, and he’s very much in the thick of it again in the tournament’s final installment this March.

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Day’s a little reluctant to call himself one of the elder statesmen of the game. But he does concede that time has marched on.

“I’m definitely older than a lot of the guys now,” Day said. “Obviously, Tom Kim is our youngest guy. This is, I think, my 16th season or something like that. But I must say I’m playing against an older guy tomorrow, so that’s going to be fun.”

That older guy got the better of him in that 2013 WGC semifinals when he blasted Day 4 and 3. Kuchar, who will carry an impressive 36-11-5 match play record into Saturday morning’s round of 16, went on to beat Hunter Mahan in that final a decade ago for his only WGC title.

But Kuchar has competed well at ACC, bowing out against Scheffler in the 2021 Dell semis and losing to Kevin Kisner in the 2019 championship match.

“He’s a tough guy to beat,” Day said.

The journey continues.

Dell Match Play

Through Sunday, Austin Country Club, Golf Channel and NBC

This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Aussie golfer Jason Day has had his highs and lows, eyes a comeback