Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Lefty gets it right

-

clinching the victory Monday morning at Pebble Beach. well as the previous 16 and polished off his bogey-free final round with one last birdie for a 7-under 65 and a three-shot victory over Paul Casey in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Mickelson won at Pebble Beach for the fifth time, matching the record set by Mark O’Meara. He has gone 28 years since his first PGA Tour victory and his 44th, and he joined Tiger Woods as the only players to surpass $90 million in career earnings.

“It’s a lot more work and effort to play at this level,” Mickelson said. “And I have believed for some time that if I play at my best, it will be good enough to win tournament­s.

“The challenge is getting myself to play my best. It’s a lot more work off the course, it’s more time in the gym, it’s more time eating, it’s more time focusing, it’s all these things that go into it.”

Making it even more special is Pebble Beach, where he made his pro debut at the U.S. Open in 1992, where he won the first of his five titles in another Monday finish in 1998, this one in August because of rain.

There was plenty of sunlight for the Monday morning finish, just no drama.

Mickelson, who started the final round three shots behind, never came close to a bogey and built a threeshot lead through 16 holes on Sunday night when it was too dark to finish, no matter how hard he lobbied to keep going.

The final round Sunday had been delayed at the start by one hour because of rain, and then sunshine quickly gave way to hail that covered the greens in a sheet of white and led to a two-hour delay.

But it all worked out well in the end for Mickelson on Monday.

Mickelson 19-under 268.

Casey needed Mickelson to make a big blunder on the two closing holes, and there was little chance of that. Casey at least birdied the 18th for a 71 to finish alone in second, the difference of $152,000. finished at

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States