Springfield News-Sun

Mickelson ‘deeply sorry’ for comments on Saudi league

- By Doug Ferguson

Phil Mickelson apologized Tuesday for comments about the Saudis and a proposed super league, which he claims were off the record and not meant to be shared publicly.

Mickelson also said in a statement he has felt pressure and stress affecting him at a deeper level over the last 10 years and he needs time away. However, he did not say if he would be taking a break from golf.

“I’m beyond disappoint­ed and will make every effort to self-reflect and learn from this,” he said.

Also, KPMG became the first of Mickelson’s corporate sponsors to announce an end to their partnershi­p, a decision the company said was mutual.

Most damaging about Mickelson’s remarks to author and golf writer Alan Shipnuck was referring to the Saudis financing a proposed breakaway league as “scary mother (expletive)s.” He also told Shipnuck, who is writing a biography on Mickelson due out in May, that it was worth getting in bed with the Saudis, despite their history of human rights abuses, if it meant a chance to change the PGA Tour.

The interview took place last November.

“We know they killed (Washington Post columnist Jamal) Khashoggi and have a horrible record on human rights. They execute people over there for being gay,” he said. “Knowing all of this, why would I even consider it? Because this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to reshape how the PGA Tour operates.”

Mickelson said he has always put the interests of golf first, “although it doesn’t look this way now given my recent comments.”

“There is the problem of off record comments being share out of context and without my consent,” he said. “But the bigger issue is that I used words I sincerely regret that do not reflect my true feelings or intentions.”

Mickelson said he was “deeply sorry” and said his comments were reckless.

Shipnuck wrote on The Fire Pit Collective, where he published Mickelson’s comments last week, that “not once did he say our conversati­on was off-therecord or on background or just between us or anything remotely like that. He simply opened a vein.”

Shipnuck tweeted Tuesday that Mickelson’s claims he spoke off the record were “completely false.”

KPMG, meanwhile, said the company and Mickelson agreed mutually to end a sponsorshi­p that had been around since 2008. “We wish him the best,” KPMG said in an email.

Mickelson’s statement, received about the same time as KPMG’S announceme­nt, said he has given his partners the option to pause or end their relationsh­ips “as I understand it might be necessary given the current circumstan­ces.”

Still unclear is where Mickelson might play next. His statement concluded, “I know I have not been my best and desperatel­y need some time away to prioritize the ones I love most and work on being the man I want to be.”

Damaged Oakland Hills clubhouse to be rebuilt

The Oakland Hills Country Club’s century-old clubhouse, devastated last week by a fire, will be rebuilt and plans call for a replica of the stately white, pillared building that housed artifacts of some of golf ’s biggest stars at the suburban Detroit course.

Rick Palmer, president of the Oakland Hills Country Club, said Monday that board members who met Saturday “unanimousl­y made an easy decision to determine that the restored, rebuilt clubhouse will be a replica of what the iconic clubhouse was before the fire.”

Palmer said there’s no timetable for when the rebuilding would be completed, but he anticipate­d it would take “at least a couple of seasons.” He did not have an estimate of the project’s cost.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Phil Mickelson says he has felt pressure and stress affecting him at a deeper level over the last 10 years and he needs time away. However, he did not say if he would be taking a break from golf.
DAVID J. PHILLIP / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Phil Mickelson says he has felt pressure and stress affecting him at a deeper level over the last 10 years and he needs time away. However, he did not say if he would be taking a break from golf.

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