The Columbus Dispatch

Mickelson laments missed putt

- By Eddie Pells

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — It was the kind of mistake that could cost a guy the U.S. Open.

“I flinched,” Phil Mickelson said about a 22-inch putt that rimmed out on the third green Thursday.

It was hardly the worst thing that’s happened to Mickelson at the major that has escaped him, sometimes ever-so cruelly, all 27 times he’s played in it. If he’s able to claw back into contention at this one, who knows how important that wasted shot might be?

Mickelson opened at Pebble Beach with a 1-over-par 72 that, on many days at the U.S. Open, would be the sort of score players smile about. Just not on this day.

On a morning featuring calm and overcast conditions with soft greens, Mickelson walked off the course trailing the leaders by Phil Mickelson shot a 1-over-par 72 that left him seven strokes behind leader Justin Rose. six. He finished the day seven strokes behind leader Justin Rose. Not out of it, certainly, but not as good as it could have been.

“There was a good opportunit­y to score, and I played better than I shot,” Mickelson said. “But there’s three more days.”

If he’s going to make up ground, he certainly needs to do better on the greens, which were not, in any way, playing the way they were last year on Saturday at Shinnecock. That time, frustrated with the crisped-out putting surfaces and the USGA in general, Mickelson swiped at his ball on the 13th green while it was still rolling, incurring a two-stroke penalty and the wrath of golf purists everywhere for a move so unbecoming.

A year later, on the other side of the continent, Mickelson served up nothing nearly as dramatic — but his performanc­e resulted in a squandered chance nonetheles­s.

Holding steady at even par after 11 holes, his drive on No. 3 landed in the middle of the fairway, 93 yards away, and he looked positioned for a birdie. He left the lob wedge 40 feet short of the hole. After the birdie attempt barely missed, Mickelson was in tap-in range. He stepped up, chomped on his gum and took the putter back. The ball lipped out, and ended up farther away than it started.

Mickelson made no excuses for that bogey.

“I flinched. My concentrat­ion, I should be able to tap that in,” Mickelson said.

Later, he spun a gorgeous wedge to inside of 6 feet on the 108-yard par-3 seventh, but left the blade open and swiped across the ball on the birdie putt. On an easy day at Pebble, he played what is traditiona­lly the “easiest” stretch of the golf course — 3 through 7 — in even par.

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