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Mickelson on a major mission



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Published Date: 07 August 2008
PHIL Mickelson tees off at Oakland Hills today as the bookmakers' favourite for the US PGA Championship, his last chance to win a major in a year that has been littered with disappointment at the biggest events.
There was a 75 in the third round of the Masters that knocked him out of contention. There were no drivers in his bag at the US Open for two rounds. And he lost a ball at Royal Birkdale on his way to a 79 in the first round of the Open, a major that
ended before he could settle in for a cup of tea.

Not that this year has been a disaster by any means, he insists.

"This is a big week," said Mickelson on the eve of the tournament. "Because right now my season, with just two wins, is just OK. But if I were able to come through on Sunday and win this event, it would make an OK year a great one."

It also might erase some sour memories of Oakland Hills.

Mickelson first met "The Monster" in 1996 and endured his worst finish in a US Open over four rounds. He tied for 94th that week, 19 shots out of the lead. Even more forgettable was his last trip to Oakland Hills for the Ryder Cup in 2004.

He already was under more scrutiny than usual for switching from Titleist to Callaway a week before the Ryder Cup. Then he went two days away from his team-mates, taking one day off and spending another day working on the adjacent North Course. US captain Hal Sutton paired him with Tiger Woods, and while neither played well in both their losses, Mickelson caught the brunt of the blame.

Sutton then benched him, saying Mickelson would be a cheerleader instead of a player.

It was a ragged finish to what had otherwise been a brilliant year for Mickelson, who won his first major at the Masters, was second at the US Open, missed a playoff at the Open by one shot and was two shots out of a playoff at the PGA Championship.

But his swing was gone long before he arrived at Oakland Hills for the Ryder Cup. That was when Mickelson used to pour so much into the majors that he had little left at the end of the year.

If last week was any indication, he's headed in the right direction.

Mickelson blew a chance to win the World Golf Championship at Firestone last week with three bogeys on the final four holes, although he explained yesterday why he wasn't nearly as alarmed as everyone else.

"Obviously, I didn't like the way I finished," he said. "But I was so glad that I was in a position to compete for the championship, to get back into contention, to have an opportunity where every putt counted and put myself in a pressure situation heading into this event. I would have loved to have won last week – there's no arguing that point. But I really needed to be there like I was."

Such is the aura of Mickelson, good and bad.

The winner at Firestone was Vijay Singh, a three-time major champion who, unlike Mickelson, has won a money title, PGA Tour player of the year and was No1 in the world. Yet all the TV sports shows focused on the next day was Mickelson.

"Were they complimenting my outfit?" Mickelson joked.

It wasn't his most unseemly collapse, but it still makes news.

Mickelson had reason to find progress from what looked like a setback.

"When I'm playing a course, I'm trying to take half the trouble out of play," he said. "So I want to set up down the right edge of the fairway and hit a cut, and if I miss it left, it doesn't bother me. What bothers me is if I hook it."

Mickelson caught the left edge of the green and found a bunker on No. 15, making bogey. He caught the left bunker on the 17th, leading to another bogey. And his hopes effectively ended with a blocked tee shot to the left rough on the 18th.

"I don't look at that overly disappointed," he said. "Because I missed it to the side I wanted to miss it."

It would help not to miss anything at Oakland Hills, a course that some believe might prove to be the toughest major of the year. It has been stretched out to just under 7,400 yards, a real beast for a par 70, and occasional showers this week figure to make it feel longer.

"It's tougher than Torrey Pines, all things being equal," Geoff Ogilvy said.

Tiger Woods won the US Open at Torrey Pines in a play-off after finishing at one-under 283. Trevor Immelman won the Masters at eight-under 280. Padraig Harrington won the British Open at three-over 283, but Ogilvy claims he doesn't count Royal Birkdale because of 35mph wind.

"Nothing ever was going to get as tough as Birkdale. You could put an asterisk next to it," he said. "The irony will be that the US Open could be the easiest course we play all year."

The difficulty of Oakland Hills always has been the greens, so heavily contoured that they likely will be slower than some majors to keep it fair. And the length since Rees Jones got his hands on the course after the Ryder Cup is most noticeable on the par 3s, such as the downhill, 257-yard ninth and the 238-yard 17th, which played so long into a breeze Monday that Bart Bryant hit a driver.

"If one of the big hitters is piping it, they're going to have a good week," Bryant said.

Mickelson can only hope he's one of those guys, and a decent year for him turns into a great season by any measure.

Woods was in this position a year ago – without a major for the year – when he tied a major record with a 63 in the second round at Southern Hills and went on to defend his title in the PGA Championship.

Three years ago, that was Mickelson. He had gone four months without winning until going wire-to-wire to win at Baltusrol.

"I had an OK year in 2005, a couple of wins, and looked at it as though it would make an OK year great," Mickelson said. "And I feel the same way this year. It's been an OK year, but winning the last major could turn it into something special."

• Baltusrol Golf Club of Springfield, New Jersey, will host the US PGA Championship in 2016.

Baltusrol, the AW Tillinghast design where Mickelson won the US PGA crown in 2005, has staged seven US Opens and two US Women's Opens.





The full article contains 1144 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 06 August 2008 10:20 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
 

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