The Daily Courier

Phil apologizes to Open fan (no, not for that)

- By JIMMY GOLEN

BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) — Phil Mickelson’s tee shot on No. 3 landed in the rough to the right, and when he arrived at his ball he saw a man sitting on the ground, holding an icepack to his right temple, with medical staff gathered around.

Mickelson went over and gave the man a glove and apologized. One problem: It was Sam Horsfield’s shot from the neighborin­g sixth hole that hit him.

“It’s just instinct,” Mickelson said, drawing laughter from the gallery. “I would normally think it’s me.”

That’s how things went for the six-time U.S. Open runner-up at The Country Club this week: a series of apologies, interrupte­d by a whole lot of bad golf shots.

“Wish I had played better,” Mickelson, who declined to talk to reporters, said in a transcript that was distribute­d by the USGA on Friday after he followed a first-round 78 with a 3-over 73 to miss the cut.

The plus-11 finish left him in the clubhouse ahead of just one PGA Tour regular and far beneath the projected cut line of 4 over.

“It was OK. I had a good day,” he said. A six-time major champion who has become the face of the Saudi Arabia-backed LIV Golf tour, Mickelson was competing on American soil for the first time in more than four months. But if the fans held his cash grab against him, they didn’t let it show.

“Phil, liven it up!”

“Long live Phil!”

“You’ve got work to do!”

“A 62 makes the cut, Phil!”

“You and me forever, baby!”

And fans in a tent next to the sixth tee sang him “Happy Birthday.”

“The fans here have always been terrific, and they really support all sports,” Mickelson said, according to the transcript. “I love it when we bring golf here because they create a really special atmosphere.”

But Mickelson had little else to smile about. Starting on the 10th hole, he made back-toback-to-back bogeys on Nos. 13-14-15 and needed a 15-footer to save par on the third hole after nearly winding up in the gallery with his drive.

He wasn’t as lucky on No. 4, a 493-yard par 4, where he missed a 12-foot par putt and left himself almost as much coming back for

bogey. But the 52-year-old left-hander — his birthday was actually Thursday — followed with back-to-back birdies.

He sank a 43-foot putt from the front apron on the fifth hole and an even longer one on the sixth, both times acknowledg­ing the crowd’s cheers with a thumbs-up and wave. On his way to the seventh tee, he gave his ball to a 9-year-old girl standing by the ropes.

“I enjoyed the week,” said Mickelson, who left Brookline still needing a U.S. Open victory to complete his career Grand Slam. “It was spectacula­r to come back to such a historic course, and I thought the setup was remarkable. Just really showcased what a special place this is.”

BIG LEAD TO BIG MELTDOWN

BROOKLINE, Mass. — M.J. Daffue’s problems Friday at the U.S. Open began on a cheap piece of carpeting in a hospitalit­y suite left of the 14th fairway.

If only that had been the worst of it.

There was nothing about Daffue’s shot off the deck of the hospitalit­y suite that could’ve predicted his freefall from 6-under par and a three-shot lead to outside the top 10 by the end of his second round. He hit that shot over the railing, then sailed it some 250 yards to

the rough left of the green, about even with the pin.

But he duffed the first pitch shot and made bogey. He followed with another bogey on 15, then clipped a ball clean from a greenside bunker on No. 18 to finish with a doubleboge­y there.

The South African shot 2-over 72 and closed his day at 1 under after spending most of the morning alone in the lead.

“A crazy battle,” Daffue said. “Obviously, I’m disappoint­ed. But you expect at some stage during the week in the U.S. Open, the golf course is going to come and bite us.”

It’s hardly the worst Daffue has been through. A story on pgatour.com details the depression and doubt that have been part of Daffue’s life over the last decade.

But golf, and life, have gotten better of late. A series of strong finishes on the Korn Ferry Tour has helped him secure his PGA Tour card for 2022-23.

He came into the week ranked 296th. Some of the best advice he’s received over the years has come from someone in his country who knows a little about U.S. Opens. Two-time champion Retief Goosen.

“Stay within yourself and focus on the six feet directly surroundin­g you.”

 ?? ?? The Associated Press
Phil Mickelson hits on the third hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at The Country Club, Friday, in Brookline, Mass.
The Associated Press Phil Mickelson hits on the third hole during the second round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at The Country Club, Friday, in Brookline, Mass.

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