Phil fooled us again
The problem with taking Phil Mickelson too seriously is that if
you’re not careful, you’ll actually start believing in
what he says.
The trick is not to listen because he’s so thoroughly
talked himself into the righteousness of whatever it is that
he’s got in his head that he’s sure to get you to drink
the Kool Aid, too.
He’s like the Tony Robbins of golf. There are few
people who think they’re as smart as Phil thinks he is and at
the same time are so willing to share with you everything they
think they know about a subject.
Whether it’s why having two drivers in the bag is a
winning strategy -- followed, of course, by the wisdom of having no
driver at all -- or playing practice rounds away from the venue of
a major so as to not get too burned out on the place or (my
personal favorite) the contraption he brought to the ‘07 U.S.
Open at Oakmont to measure the speed of different parts of the
greens surfaces.
It’s not enough to know the speed of the green by the
old-fashioned stimp device. It was imperative, Phil said, to
discover the speed of each sector of each green. So he and his golf
geek guru Dave Pelz spent countless hours trudging their machine to
each green and taking meticulous readings.
Turned out that knowledge was so invaluable it helped
Mickelson to 11 over par through two rounds and his first missed
cut at a major in eight years.
So, yes, you could say I’m a trifle burned out on
Mickelson’s genius.
But, still, I have to confess that before the Farmers
Insurance Open he really had me sold on the New Phil.
Soon to turn 40, I thought he’d finally outgrown his
goofball ways and committed himself to living up to his potential.
Because the man has talent, serious talent.
When he’s at his mercurial best, only Tiger Woods can
hope to hang with him and, lately, he’s even lowered
Tiger’s colors. Mickelson beat Woods in back-to-back events
(Tour Championship and HSBC Champions in China) at the end of last
season.
After Phil won at Atlanta, Johnny Miller even suggested there
would be a new world No. 1 in 2010.
Now at the time I have to admit that, like much of what comes
out of Johnny’s mouth, I took this with a proverbial grain of
salt but last week I started to think that maybe he’s more of
a savant than I’ve ever given him credit for being.
Now the thing with being the top dog is that you’ve got
to be consistent. Woods, no matter how he’s playing, can
always be counted on to find a way to be in the mix at every
tournament he enters. He’s a force of nature in that way.
Mickelson, not so much.
Last year he won at Hogan’s Alley in LA by shooting
63-72-62-72.
I mean, who does that? Who shoots 15-under to win at Riviera
with two rounds over par? Phil does. In fact, it’s vintage
Phil. The guy’s a high-wire act. It’s always an
adventure.
But after listening to him last week as he prepared to make
his season debut, I really thought there was no way the New Phil
was going to lose at Torrey Pines.
For one, there was too much at stake.
With Tiger still licking his (self-inflicted) wounds, the
stage was set for Mickelson to take over his throne, figuratively
if not yet literally.
And there would’ve been something poetic about Phil
winning at his home track given Woods -- who also has sentimental
boyhood memories of Torrey Pines -- has won there seven times in 12
events, including that famous U.S. Open win.
But what really convinced me was how compelling Mickelson was
about the state of his game and how excited he was to be starting
the season. He was so compelling, he even threw a little smack at
Woods in his pre-tournament news conference.
“I expect this year, with or without (Woods), to be one
of the best years of my career,” he said.
Looking at the watered-down field at the Farmers Insurance
Open, how could we not have given Phil the W?
Seven-under par after two rounds, he was perfectly perched. I
have to admit to feeling a little uneasy when he started hitting it
all over the map on Saturday, but he still scraped together a
two-under par round of 70, so no real damage done.
Plus, I figured he was distracted after being called a small
“c” cheat for using a 20-year-old wedge he really had
no reason to be using. I mean, Phil, you’re saying you
don’t spin the ball enough? Why draw unnecessary attention to
yourself? Unless the wedge is in his bag for other reasons?
I’ll admit to feeling a little queasy when he decided
to fly in swing coach Butch Harmon from Florida. Now that was
weird, even for Phil.
Their range session, though, seemed to have gone well and now
I‘m thinking it was a masterstroke by the New Phil.
He was only four back and who really thought Ryuji Imada was
going to hold that third-round lead?
Yet something was lost in translation between the range and
the first tee.
Phil opened with three straight bogeys. He couldn’t hit
it straight, couldn’t make a putt and limped in with a 73 to
finish 19th.,
Yet, as always, he had a smile for the camera and a wave for
his fans.
“I'm excited about next week because my game is feeling
not as rusty as it looks," he said.
In other words, same old Phil.