Oman Daily Observer

Mickelson’s short game magic lifts him

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CHARLOTTE, North Carolina: Veteran Phil Mickelson used his short game magic to claw his way within three strokes of halfway leader Andrew Loupe after the second round of the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow on Friday.

On a day when defending champion Rory McIlroy roared into contention before a bogey-bogey finish left him trailing by six, Mickelson hit only nine greens in regulation but used his vaunted touch around the greens to card a two-under-par 70.

Mickelson, a five-times major champion who needs only to win the US Open next month to complete the elusive career Grand Slam, got up-anddown to save par eight times, his lone bogey coming at his final hole, where he drove into a fairway bunker.

“I scrapped it around,” said Mickelson, adding that poor driving, rather than suspect iron play, had put him in danger of dropping shots.

“My short game was sharp. I hit a lot of good iron shots, but I had to play for par a little too many times because I didn’t put it in play off the tee,” he said.

“I’ve been driving the ball really well heading into this week, so I’m a little disappoint­ed with the driver.”

Mickelson above all covets a US Open championsh­ip and he is using this week as the start of his serious preparatio­n for the June event at Oakmont outside Pittsburgh.

He is a record six-times Open runner-up, with several of those secondplac­ings coming in heartbreak­ing fashion. Loupe, who shared the firstround lead with fellow American Steve Wheatcroft, had a chance to build a substantia­l advantage, only to bogey two of his final three holes for a 71.

“It’s halftime,” said the long-hitting Loupe, who is without a win in 53 starts on the PGA Tour and understand­s a 36hole lead counts for little.

He posted an eight-under 136 total to lead compatriot Roberto Castro (66) by one stroke.

Castro vaulted into second place with the help of a rare eagle at the tough parfour 18th, where he holed out with a five-iron from the rough from 220 yards.

McIlroy, meanwhile, picked up four shots on the easier front nine, including a chip-in, 80-foot birdie at the par-five seventh, but his charge stalled with two closing bogeys on the difficult finishing holes. “It felt a little better for me today, a lot of shots of much better quality than yesterday,” said the Northern Irishman after a 69.

“It’s a step in the right direction. Last year as well, I had a 14-under weekend. I’ll need to do something similar this year.”

American Zac Blair was disqualifi­ed in unusual circumstan­ces for using a non-conforming club, in this case his putter. Blair bent his putter when he banged it against his head in frustratio­n after missing a putt at the fifth hole.

He putted out the hole before subsequent­ly informing an official on the next hole of the situation.

He was disqualifi­ed for violating rule 4-3b, which states: “If, during a stipulate round, a player’s club is damaged other than in the normal course of play rendering it non-conforming or changing its playing characteri­stics, the club subsequent­ly must not be used or replaced during the round.”

 ??  ?? Phil Mickelson
Phil Mickelson

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