Los Angeles Times

These two are quite a match

Woods and Mickelson will play together in first two rounds this week, but a rivalry that was once the most heated in golf has turned friendly

- By Edgar Thompson sports@latimes.com

Woods, Mickelson will play together for two days at Players Championsh­ip.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — It felt a little like a warmup for a WWE cage match instead of the lead-up to the PGA Tour’s showcase event.

Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods, mano a mano for 18 holes, two aging legends battling for supremacy.

The idea came from Mickelson, who suggested he and Woods just bypass the first three rounds — along with the deepest field in golf — at this week’s Players Championsh­ip and go straight to Sunday for a winner-take-all extravagan­za.

“Now, I don’t know if he wants a piece of me,” Mickelson cautioned.

Woods, speaking later, played along with the goodnature­d trash talk between the two longtime rivals who have evolved into friends. Still true to his alpha dog nature, he also made sure Mickelson realized his place in the game.

“How many times have we won on tour?” Woods, who has 79 victories to Mickelson’s 43, asked with a smile.

Fans, television networks, advertiser­s and the tour certainly would welcome an all-too-rare, finalday duel between Tiger and Phil. For now, everyone will have to settle for a Thursday-Friday pairing and hope each remains in contention come Sunday.

Few first-round pairings in memory will generate the buzz or crowds that Woods, Mickelson and Rickie Fowler should Thursday when they tee off at 10:52 a.m. PDT at the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass.

Rarely has Fowler, one of the game’s most popular players, been a third wheel. But even the 29-year-old is excited to see the matchup.

“I’ve got the best seat in the house,” Fowler said. “It’ll be fun . ... I know it’s going to be crazy out there.”

The golf could be electric too even though Mickelson’s recent win in Mexico is the only victory between them since 2013.

Mickelson is coming off a tie for fifth at Quail Hollow, his first top-five finish in eight starts. Woods had two top-fives during the Florida swing in March, is healthy for the first time in years and ranks inside the top 20 in scoring and strokes gained tee to green.

“I don’t know how it’s going to play out, but I just know that we seem to be bringing out the best in each other,” Mickelson said. “We’ve been playing some really good golf lately, and I’m hoping that we have a great week. I think that everybody here wants to see us play well.”

Woods and Mickelson have put on a show a few times before.

Their 2005 duel at Doral was golf at its best. Woods’ 30-foot birdie on the 17th hole moved him to 24 under par and proved the difference, but not until Mickelson’s chip shot on the final hole singed the edge of the cup in the one-shot loss.

At the 2009 Masters, Mickelson got the better of Woods with a front-nine 30 that caddie Steve Williams later called the best golf he’d witnessed firsthand, despite being on the bag for 13 of Woods’ 14 major wins.

Mickelson has no illusions about who was better at Woods’ peak during the early 2000s.

“I don’t think anybody today who wasn’t there that witnessed it, and I don’t think anybody before, will ever see that level of play again,” Mickelson said. “It was the most remarkable golf in the history of the game, and I think unrepeatab­le. And it sucked to have to play against him. It really did.

“You look at it, and you say, ‘… How am I going to beat this?’ ”

Mickelson eventually would close the gap, because of his improvemen­t and Woods’ injuries and personal travails. During 35 pairings, Woods posted a better score 16 times and Mickelson 15.

But during their most high-profile pairing, as partners at the 2004 Ryder Cup, both ended up losers, dropping their two matches together and creating a sense that a deep-seated animosity existed.

Each has denied it. Whatever the case, the relationsh­ip has never been better.

The two surprised many teeing it up during a Tuesday practice round at the Masters. Woods said the two grew closer at the 2016 Ryder Cup and 2017 Presidents Cup, where the injured Woods was a vice captain and Mickelson a competitor.

Time has played a role too. After more than 20 years out on Tour, Woods, 42, and Mickelson, 47, have developed a mutual respect and come to the realizatio­n their careers are winding down and there is more to life than golf.

Woods reached out to Mickelson as his wife, Amy, battled breast cancer. When Woods battled injuries, Mickelson checked on him.

“He always texted me some very encouragin­g words,” Woods said.

Woods said Mickelson even offered some shortgame advice during his struggles in 2015.

Woods and Mickelson were last paired a year earlier, during the first two rounds of the 2014 PGA Championsh­ip. Woods’ back surgeries have limited the opportunit­ies lately, but putting the two biggest draws in the game in the same pairing simply never seemed to be good for business.

“That’s what the tour wanted,” Woods said. “They wanted to get fans in here on Thursday and then on Friday, so they had one of us in the afternoon either day.”

These days, Woods and Mickelson paired together makes more sense than it ever has. Never have the onetime adversarie­s been closer.

On the golf course, though, they are bent on beating each other.

“I enjoy either competing with him on the first or second day or if it’s the last day,” Woods said. “It’s always been a blast, and he’s one hell of a competitor. And it’s always going to be a challenge to try and beat him.”

 ?? Curtis Compton Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on ?? IN A SCENE that would have been unlikely a few years ago, Tiger Woods, left, and Phil Mickelson share a laugh while playing a practice round at the Masters in April. They have one win in five years between them.
Curtis Compton Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on IN A SCENE that would have been unlikely a few years ago, Tiger Woods, left, and Phil Mickelson share a laugh while playing a practice round at the Masters in April. They have one win in five years between them.

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