Twitter
Categories
Archives

Entries in Phil Mickelson (106)

11:59AM

Global Golf Post: Mahan's Sunday Morning Mess

By Art Spander
For GlobalGolfPost.com


SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA — Hunter Mahan went to sleep on an eagle Saturday night at the Farmers Open and woke up to a double-bogey Sunday morning. He was awake, wasn't he?

A great finish to round three, a three on the par-5 18th at Torrey Pines, tied him for second and put him in the final group with Phil Mickelson and Bill Haas.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2011 Global Golf Post
9:19AM

Newsday (N.Y.): Pavin can't hide Mickelson in singles play

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


NEWPORT, Wales -- The question was more of an answer. Where, Corey Pavin, the U.S. Ryder Cup captain was asked, could he hide Phil Mickelson in today's singles?

Hide the golfer No. 2 in the world rankings? That was an indictment of Mickelson's game, which, since he has lost all three of his team matches hasn't been what was expected of him.

"There is nobody to hide,'' Pavin said Sunday. Indeed, 12 players, 12 singles, although Mickelson, going against Peter Hanson, was in the 10th match on the schedule. That's two below Tiger Woods, who faces Francesco Molinari at No. 8.

"I think that's a great spot,'' Pavin said, justifying his placement of Woods, who used to go leadoff. "I feel he is going to have a great chance to win his match.''

What Pavin said about Mickelson, who has more losses (17) than any U.S. player in the Ryder Cup -- Raymond Floyd held the negative mark with 16 -- is Phil "had a few 6-footers that were very key putts, and if he makes those, it's a different result.''

"We just haven't played well enough to win our matches,'' Mickelson conceded.

What Woods said after he and Steve Stricker were beaten in foursomes, 6 and 5, by Lee Westwood-Luke Donald -- Tiger's most one-sided match-play loss ever -- was: "We thought we got a little momentum with the birdie on nine Saturday,'' Woods said, "but it just didn't turn out that way.''

- - - - - -

http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/pavin-can-t-hide-mickelson-in-singles-play-1.2333243
Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.
8:19AM

Newsday (N.Y.): After good start, U.S. sputters as Europe roars

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


NEWPORT, Wales -- Team America suddenly looked like Team Bewilderment. The Ryder Cup was being wrenched away. The only thing able to stop Europe on this long day's journey into night was, well, night.

"It's a shame it got dark,'' Luke Donald said. "We would have liked to keep going.''

Donald is an Englishman. Who won the NCAA championship for Northwestern. Who lives and plays in the United States. Who is on the Euro squad.

And his team was leading in all six matches that remained unfinished Saturday as the competition, dissected by a more than a 7-hour delay Friday, was reworked into a format that had golfers going from 9 a.m. to 6:50 p.m., and that still might not be enough.

There are four partnership sessions for the Ryder Cup. Two finished, sort of, and the United States was in front 6 to 4. But six more matches, two foursomes (alternate shot) and four fourballs (better-ball) hadn't finished. Europe is in front in every one of those.

After they conclude Sunday, assuming another storm doesn't rip across south Wales, then the 12 golfers on each team play singles.

"I just wanted to get even at eight points apiece before singles,'' said Colin Montgomerie, the Euro captain. The probability is he'll be ahead.

Eldrick Woods stopped playing like a Tiger. Phil Mickelson hasn't even started to play like Lefty. And Donald, Lee Westwood, Padraig Harrington and Graeme McDowell have been rolling in putts practically all the way from London, 120 miles to the east.

"Well, momentum is a wonderful thing in Ryder Cups,'' said Colin Montgomerie, the European captain, "and it's evident that momentum clearly is with Europe at the moment, although the [posted] score favors the States.''

In the two foursomes still going, Donald and Westwood were 4 up over Woods and Steve Stricker, and it was 5 up before Stricker got a win on the last hole played, the ninth; and McDowell and Rory McIlroy, the two from Northern Ireland, were 3 up over Zach Johnson and Hunter Mahan through seven.

In fourballs, Harrington and Ross Fisher were 1 up over Jim Furyk-Dustin Johnson through eight; Peter Hanson-Miguel Angel Jimenez 2 up over Bubba Watson-Jeff Overton through six; brothers Edoardo and Francesco Molinari of Italy 1-up over Stewart Cink-Matt Kuchar through five; and Ian Poulter-Martin Kaymer 2 up over Mickelson and Rickie Fowler through four.

"I have not seen points given in matches that were through four, five, six seven holes,'' said Corey Pavin, the U.S. captain, seeking optimism. "We have to try to turn momentum back in our favor.''

But how? The Woods-Stricker twosome was unbeatable in last fall's Presidents Cup in San Francisco. At this Ryder Cup it won both the fourball, which finished Saturday morning and the subsequent foursomes. But it couldn't do a thing in the third match, beginning with the first hole.

"I think Tiger's playing well,'' Pavin said. "Obviously Steve and Tiger didn't get off to a very good start [in the third match]. It happens.''

Mickelson and Dustin Johnson lost both matches, so Pavin split them up -- Mickelson pairing with Fowler, Johnson with Furyk -- for the third, but that wasn't working either.

"Everybody thought it was a pretty good pairing,'' Pavin said of Mickelson-Dustin Johnson. "Just didn't get it going. Why? You've got me. So change it up.''

What changed for Europe was on the greens. Fisher, an Englishman, birdied three, four and five, in his partnership with Harrington, who started off with a birdie.

"I felt there wasn't enough passion on the course,'' Montgomerie said. "It was a very important two hours of play this afternoon. I just felt we needed to get the crowd on our side. The crowd wasn't getting involved enough, because we weren't involving them enough.''

The crowd was into it quickly enough.

And the U.S. team was falling out of it just as quickly.

- - - - - -
8:35AM

RealClearSports: War and Sports at Ryder Cup

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


NEWPORT, Wales -- The question brought a laugh. And some serious thought. Could Phil Mickelson, in response to the United States Ryder Cup team being addressed by an F-16 fighter pilot, who happens also to be a golf pro, "explain America's apparent fondness for associating sport with war?''

Mickelson, more concerned about his driving, said only, "I haven't noticed that to be the case, but I do feel proud to be part of a country that cares about the civil rights of people throughout the world and not just in our country.''

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010
9:21AM

Global Golf Post: Crazy Week, Wild Finish, Solid Winner

By Art Spander
For GlobalGolfPost.com


SHEBOYGAN, WISCONSIN — The PGA Championship, for reasons logical or not, used to be called the major that's a minor. Oh how that has changed. And we're not Whistling Straits, uh, whistling Dixie.

There wasn't much more anybody could wish for from this year's tournament, whether it was the buildup surrounding Tiger and Phil, the fog delays, which turned the opening rounds into Unfinished Symphonies, the swapping of denials over Ryder Cup selections between Corey Pavin and Jim Gray, the course record by the guy from China whose only English may be "You're away," and a stretch run that included almost everyone except Palmer and Nicklaus — or Tiger and Phil.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 Global Golf Post