McIlroy-Spieth battle for top ranking continues

Gap between the top two is the narrowest since official rankings were launched in 1986.

mcilroy spieth
The gap between McIlroy and Spieth is a wafer-thin 0.023 average points [AP]

The back-and-forth between Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth at the top of the world rankings shows no sign of slowing down with a further change possible after this week’s BMW Championship in Lake Forest, Illinois.

Northern Irishman McIlroy returned to the summit when the latest rankings were issued on Monday, the fourth successive week that he and American Spieth have traded places.

The margin between the two is a wafer-thin 0.023 average points, the narrowest gap between the world’s top two players since the official rankings were launched in 1986.

McIlroy and Spieth are both in the field for the BMW Championship, the penultimate FedExCup playoff event of the season, and either of them – along with third-ranked Australian Jason Day – could be world number one next week.

“It’ll be like that until one of us separates ourselves a little bit,” McIlroy told reporters ahead of Thursday’s opening round at Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest.

“At the end of the day, it’s just about playing and playing well. I don’t know any other way we could determine the best player in the world.

“You could do it on a one-year point system instead of two. I think two years is a good reflection of how you played.”

The ranking system is structured on a two-year ‘rolling’ period with points awarded for each event and then maintained for a 13-week spell to give additional emphasis on recent performances.

‘Focused on own goals’

Ranking points are then reduced in equal decrements for the remaining 91 weeks of the two-year time frame. Each player is ranked according to his average points per tournament.

“We’re all focused on our own goals,” said Masters and U.S. Open champion Spieth, who became world number one for the first time after finishing runner-up to the triumphant Day in the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits last month.

“As one, two and three in the world, we’re the three that have to beat each other at the top right now in order to try to get to the top, or to remain at the top [of the rankings].

“I’m not focused on what either one’s doing on the leaderboard unless they’re in the lead, and then if they’re in the lead, how do I get up there and surpass them?”

Source: Reuters