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Mickelson
Enduring Worst Slump of Career
NEW
YORK (AP) -- Being called one of the best
players in the world never to have won a major
is now the nicest thing anyone can say about Phil
Mickelson.
Lefty
is known as the guy who can't get it right.
Especially
on Sunday.
For
the past eight years, Mickelson had been one of
the best closers on the PGA Tour. He held at least
a share of the 54-hole lead nine times dating
to 1993 and won them all.
Just
listen to him now.
"There
seems to be a mental block for me on Sundays on
the back side," Mickelson said, a problem
as dire to a golfer as being unable to find the
strike zone is to a relief pitcher.
The
latest example came at the Colonial, where Mickelson
was poised to become the first repeat champion
since Ben Hogan. With birdies on four of his first
seven holes, he shot out to a four-stroke lead
and was on cruise control toward his 19th career
PGA Tour victory.
Suddenly,
inexplicably, fabulous Phil went into a funk.
First
came a bogey from the bunker on No. 8, followed
by a three-putt on No. 9 when his birdie attempt
charged some 4 feet past the hole. He lost another
shot by making par on the 608-yard 11th hole,
a wasted chance considering Mickelson had a 6-iron
for his second shot and required two wedges to
even get on the putting surface.
It
got worse.
Sergio
Garcia made the turn in 29 and caught Mickelson
for a share of the lead with a 20-footer on the
13th. It was Sunday competition at its finest.
Mickelson took a deep breath and nearly blacked
out.
For
five straight holes starting on No. 13, Mickelson
hit as many greens as he has won majors, and it's
not hard to do that kind of math.
He
nearly went into the bunker on the 13th. He went
over the pin and the green on the 14th, leaving
himself a 4-foot par putt that he couldn't convert.
He found a bunker on the 15th with a wedge in
his hand, flew the green at No. 16 with an 8-iron
and caught a flyer out of the first cut on the
17th that landed against the grandstand.
What
followed was a flop shot that only Mickelson and
Tiger Woods would even dare try, then a 3-foot
par putt only Mickelson seems capable of missing.
"Those
are very short putts on perfect greens, and they're
just not difficult to make," he said of the
putts on Nos. 9, 14 and 17.
It
was the third time this year he has failed to
hold a 54-hole lead, and the fourth time he has
squandered a chance to win on the final day. And
it comes as no surprise that Mickelson ranks 57th
in final-round scoring average, a 70.82 that is
nearly two strokes higher than the average for
his first three rounds combined.
At
Pebble Beach, he needed a birdie on the par-5
18th to force a playoff. Instead of hitting 3-wood
to the front of the green and relying on his short
game, Mickelson hit driver off the deck from 257
yards, a huge risk with the wind blowing out toward
that big, blue water hazard down the left side.
Phil,
meet the Pacific.
He
was one stroke behind Woods and primed to make
the Masters his first major until he missed a
2-foot par putt on No. 6 that dropped him out
of the lead, and hit his drive into the trees
on No. 11 that left him in an unenviable spot
-- trying to catch Woods.
In
New Orleans, Mickelson let a three-stroke lead
get away by playing the first five holes of the
final round in 4-over par, then took bogey down
the stretch with a drive into the water.
"I've
really struggled the last four or five times I've
had a shot at it," he said. "So, it's
going to be a while, until I win again, before
I get over that mental hurdle."
Give
Mickelson credit for not making excuses. Just
don't give up on him yet.
This
is the same guy who battled Woods from start to
finish in the final round of the Tour Championship
at East Lake. Mickelson avoided crucial mistakes,
closed with a 66 and ended Woods' four-year PGA
Tour streak of converting a 54-hole leads into
wins.
A
year ago in San Diego, Mickelson answered Woods'
stirring comeback with consecutive birdies to
end Woods' PGA Tour winning streak at six.
Mickelson
remains the No. 2 player in the world, and rightfully
so. He has finished in the top three in seven
tournaments this year, including a bizarre victory
in San Diego when he won in a playoff with a double
bogey.
Still,
the gap between Mickelson and Woods is even greater
than the distance between Texas and Germany, where
Woods put on a clinic on how to close out a victory.
Mickelson
figures his best cure -- maybe his only cure --
is to win from out front. If not, he takes a fragile
psyche to the U.S. Open, where only the strongest
minds survive.
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