The Daily Courier

Calls go unanswered as Mickleson struggles

- By JOHN MARSHALL

SAN DIEGO — Phil Mickelson backed off his shot and asked for quiet after a phone went off in the gallery. Exasperate­d, he stepped back a second time when it happened again.

A third ding and Lefty couldn’t take it anymore.

“Seriously? Can we get someone to help him?” he said.

Finally able to hit in silence, Mickelson sent the shot into the bushes way left, leading to a bogey.

“I don’t understand why you just can’t turn that little button on the side into silent,” he said.

Inconsider­ate fans weren’t Mickelson’s only problem Thursday at beastly Torrey Pines.

Unable to get many good looks at birdie, Mickelson had three bogeys in his first six holes and two more late to shoot a 4-over 75 in the opening round.

That leaves him eight shots behind early leader Russell Henley in his bid to win his first U.S. Open and complete the career grand slam.

“I was fighting hard throughout the round,” Mickelson said. “I wasn’t really getting anything going and I fought really hard, and then to let two bogeys slide on 6 and 7 when I really shouldn’t have.”

Mickelson made history last month by winning the PGA Championsh­ip to become the oldest player to win a major.

He returned to his hometown, celebrated his 51st birthday Wednesday and set off to chase a bit more history.

Win at Torrey Pines and Mickelson would become the sixth player to win the career grand slam and erase some demons after coming agonizingl­y close to winning the U.S. Open so many times.

HIs bid got off to a rough start.

A heavy marine layer blanketed the bluffs at Torrey Pines early Thursday morning, delaying the first round by 90 minutes.

Once the sun came out, Mickelson hit a solid drive on his first hole of the day, the par-4 10th, but pushed his second shot into a greenside bunker. He followed with a solid bunker shot off a down slope to 13 feet, but his par putt horseshoed around the hole and out.

Then, dinging.

The 613-yard 13th hole has a steep drop on the second shot before rising up to the green, so Mickelson took out a fairway wood in an attempt to get in in the bunkers short right. After backing off three times, he pushed his second shot way left into the bushes.

Mickelson’s fourth shot, after a drop, hit the flagstick and caromed into the deep rough. He chopped it out and managed to make a 6-foot par putt, saving a hard-fought bogey.

“I hammered it,” he said. “But it was going to be 40 feet; it was going to be way past, too. It was coming in really hot. It’s not like it was going to be close. So the fact that I made 6 there, that’s all I was trying to do after taking a drop.”

A wild drive into the trees and gnarled rough left of the 15th fairway forced him to lay up, leading to another bogey that put him 3 over after six holes. Then things started to come together — for a while.

Mickelson made a 9-foot birdie putt on the par-4 17th and ran off a string of six straight pars, looking to be in decent shape at 2 under.

Then he came up short of the 519-yard, par4 sixth hole and couldn’t get up and down for par. He followed with a three-putt bogey on the par-4 seventh.

“You probably saw the disappoint­ment there,” he said. “Look, it’s part of this tournament and I was able to go without any doubles. I just didn’t make enough birdies to offset it.”

Mickelson gets another crack at Torrey Pines on Friday in the second round. He’s hoping for more birdies — and less dings.

HENLEY SETS EARLY PACE AT U.S. OPEN

Russell Henley has set the early target at the U.S. Open with a 4-under 67 at Torrey Pines. He has a one-shot lead over Francesco Molinari and Rafa Cabrera Bello.

Henley got up-and-down from just behind the green on the par-5 18th for birdie and the lead. He was one of only three players to reach 4 under from the morning starter, and the only one who finished there.

Two-time U.S. Open champion Brooks Koepka dropped two shots over his last seven holes for a 69. Patrick Rodgers was at 4 under with five holes to play and had to settle for a 70.

The lead could hold by the end of the day. The wind was freshening off the Pacific. And because of a 90-minute fog delay, the first round would not be completed until this morning.

 ??  ?? The Associated Press
Fans watch as Phil Mickelson putts on the 11th green during the first round of the U.S. Open Golf Championsh­ip, Thursday, at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego.
The Associated Press Fans watch as Phil Mickelson putts on the 11th green during the first round of the U.S. Open Golf Championsh­ip, Thursday, at Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada