The Mercury News

Lefty gets it right again in Mexico win

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The shot through a gap in the trees only he could see. The two birdies he had to have when time was running out.

Phil Mickelson finally looked like the Lefty of old Sunday in the Mexico Championsh­ip, especially when a final round of pressure, possibilit­ies and dramatic shots that kept the crowd buzzing finally ended at Chapultepe­c Golf Club.

He was posing with the trophy.

For the first time in 102 tournament­s around the world, dating to the summer of 2013 when he won the British Open at Muirfield, the 47-year-old Mickelson showed he still had the stuff to beat players who weren’t even born when he collected the first of his 43 victories on the PGA Tour.

“This is a very meaningful win,” Mickelson said after beating Justin Thomas in a playoff. “I can’t really put it into words given the tough times over the last four years, and the struggle to get here, and knowing that I was able to compete at this level but not doing it.

“To finally break through and to have this validation means a lot to me,” he continued.

Mickelson, who closed with a 5-under 66, was at his best over the back nine with as many as six players still in the mix.

Suddenly two shots behind when Thomas holed out from 119 yards for eagle on the 18th hole, Mickelson played a high-risk shot through the smallest of gaps in the trees to escape with par on the 14th hole.

That’s when he saw the score, and he followed with a two-putt birdie on the par-5 15th and a 20-foot birdie on the 16th.

Thomas capped off a 62-64 weekend with more clutch play, no shot bigger than his sand wedge that bounced behind the flag and spun back into the cup on his final hole for eagle .

The playoff, the sixth in the last eight weeks on the PGA Tour, lasted only one hole on the par-3 17th, where Thomas made bogey for the second time.

His gap wedge was too long, his chip too weak. Mickelson’s 18-foot birdie putt rimmed around the edge of the cup, and Thomas missed his par from just inside 10 feet.

LPGA

WIE TRIUMPHS AGAIN >> Michelle Wie holed a 36-foot putt from off the green on the final hole to win the Women’s World Championsh­ip by one stroke and capture her first LPGA tournament since the 2014 U.S. Women’s Open.

With four players in contention to win on the last hole, Wie managed to separate herself from the pack when she drained her lengthy birdie putt on the 72nd hole at the Sentosa Golf Club for a final round of 7-under 65 to finish at 17-under 271.

“Winning is everything. I mean, there is no better feeling than when you think you sink that winning putt. It’s a high, for sure,” Wie said.

Champions Tour

STRICKER WINS COLOGUARD CLASSIC >> Steve Stricker finally hit the 18th fairway on Omni Tucson National’s Catalina Course and has his first PGA Tour Champions victory to show for it.

Stricker came through in the Cologuard Classic a year after hitting left into the water on 18 to blow a chance for a victory in his senior debut, and a day after another 3-wood drive rolled into the water in a closing double bogey.

 ?? EDUARDO VERDUGO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phil Mickelson holds his Mexico Championsh­ip trophy Sunday, after his first win in 102 tournament­s.
EDUARDO VERDUGO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Phil Mickelson holds his Mexico Championsh­ip trophy Sunday, after his first win in 102 tournament­s.

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