Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Mickelson wins Major at 50

US golfer became the oldest to win a Major, his sixth, when he clinched the PGA C’ships by two shots

- Agencies

KIAWAH ISLAND: Standing on the 18th tee with a two-shot lead in a championsh­ip he refused to imagine himself winning, Phil Mickelson took one last violent swing with a driver — the club that betrayed him 15 years earlier in the U.S. Open.

His tee shot Sunday in the PGA Championsh­ip at Kiawah Island landed only a few yards off the fairway, but it still nestled among the people — the gallery packed tightly between the ropes and a row of hospitalit­y tents — screaming the name of their aging hero.

After Mickelson’s approach shot settled on the green, assuring the 50-year-old of becoming the oldest major champion in history, the crowd swallowed him up entirely.

Phil Mickelson, the people’s champion.

“It’s an incredible experience. I’ve never had something like that,” Mickelson said. “It was a little bit unnerving, but it was exceptiona­lly awesome, too.”

Golf can be cruel to veteran, sentimenta­l favorites. Ben Hogan at the 1955 U.S. Open. Greg Norman at the 1996 Masters and the British Open a dozen years later. And, perhaps most heartbreak­ing, 59-year-old Tom Watson at the 2009 British Open.

Mickelson, too, has had as many close calls as major victories — most of them at the U.S. Open, where he’s been runner-up six times. Winged Foot — where he gave away a oneshot lead on the 72nd hole in 2006 — wasn’t the first, or the last.

But now, the two biggest stars of their generation have a signature late-career win. Tiger Woods overcame four back surgeries, turmoil in his personal life and 11 years of frustratio­n in major championsh­ips to win the Masters two years ago at age 43.

Mickelson — happy at home and injury-free — merely stretched the limits of what’s possible after a half-century on Earth.

“There’s no reason why I or anybody else can’t do it at a later age. It just takes a little more work,” Mickelson said.

Nine days earlier, Mickelson accepted a special exemption to play in the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines in his hometown of San Diego. Now he’s assured at least five more cracks at the lone major that has eluded him. The victory makes him exempt at the U.S. Open through 2025.

Already a Hall of Famer, Mickelson joined Nick Faldo and Lee Trevino as six-time major winners. Only 11 players have won more. If he somehow won another in his 50s, he’d match Arnold Palmer, Bobby Jones, Gene Sarazen, Sam Snead and Harry Vardon.

“I don’t know how to describe the feeling of excitement and fulfillmen­t and accomplish­ment to do something when — you know, of this magnitude when very few people thought that I could,” Mickelson said.

The record will show Mickelson closed with a 1-over 73 for a two-shot win over Brooks Koepka (73) and Louis Oosthuizen (74). That doesn’t begin to describe the wild fluctuatio­ns of Sunday on the menacing Ocean Course, where Mickelson and Koepka hit shots that were both spectacula­r and shocking, sometimes on the same hole.

Between them, Mickelson and Koepka made 16 pars, 10 bogeys, nine birdies and one double bogey.

Five of the first 10 holes had swings of two shots or more — and that didn’t include the par-3 fifth, when Mickelson holed out from a waste bunker with Koepka safely on the green.

Even with three bogeys in a five-hole stretch on the back nine, Mickelson hit enough good shots to avoid bigger numbers and hold off Koepka. Then came the bedlam on 18, where Mickelson and Koepka fought their way through the crowd to get to the green.

There were no fans at last year’s three major championsh­ips. Patrons returned to the Masters last month to cheer Hideki Matsuyama’s breakthrou­gh win. But this was golf’s rowdiest gallery since before the COVID-19 pandemic, and it came at a time when the virus is receding in the U.S., with well over half of adults at least partially vaccinated.

Masks were rare among the crowd, which the PGA of America said was limited to 10,000 people a day. Fans pressed fivedeep against the ropes, stumbled atop steep dunes and clambered into trees on the sprawling Ocean Course.

Golf, which surged in popularity last year as a sport with built-in social distancing, returned to something approachin­g normal, with fans celebratin­g an extraordin­ary champion.

“It was like the Phil that I remember watching just when I turned pro and it was great to see,” Oosthuizen said.

The records Mickelson shattered were numerous. Julius Boros for 53 years held the distinctio­n of golf’s oldest major champion. He was 48 when he won the 1968 PGA Championsh­ip.

Mickelson became the first player in PGA Tour history to win tournament­s 30 years apart. The first of his 45 titles was in 1991, when he was still a junior at Arizona State and Koepka was 8 months old.

Mickelson joined Woods — who sent a tweet of congratula­tions — among the 10 players who’ve won majors in three decades.

Lefty spent very little time talking to reporters before Sunday’s post-tournament news conference and refused to discuss what a win would mean to him. Instead, he pounded extra balls on the driving range — even on Sunday, he was rehearsing swing positions in between shots — and spent time meditating to recapture the mental sharpness he said he’d lost earlier this year.

“Anybody who really thinks they can win on a Sunday is going to be feeling that pressure and the nerves,” said 49-yearold Padraig Harrington, who closed with a 69 to tie for fourth. “I’d say Phil is full to capacity, but that’s where he likes to live.”

This was Mickelson’s first major win with his brother, Tim, as his caddie. Could there be more?

“It’s very possible that this is the last tournament I ever win. Like if I’m being realistic,” Mickelson said. “But it’s also very possible that I may have had a little bit of a breakthrou­gh in some of my focus and maybe I go on a little bit of a run.”

 ?? AFP ?? Phil Mickelson acknowledg­es the crowds after walking away with the PGA Championsh­ip crown at the Ocean Course.
AFP Phil Mickelson acknowledg­es the crowds after walking away with the PGA Championsh­ip crown at the Ocean Course.

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