CARNOUSTIE, Scotland (AP) _ These are lean times for Lefty in the
majors.
Phil Mickelson came to the 18th hole at the British Open figuring
he needed par to avoid missing his second straight cut in a major.
He set his feet, had one last look down the fairway, took a mighty
swing with the driver and watched the ball sail into the iron grey
skies.
Only to splash into the Barry Burn.
Mickelson ended another frustrating round at Carnoustie on Friday
with a double bogey on his last hole for a 6-over 77, leaving him in
jeopardy of missing the cut at 6-over 148.
``I thought I was playing better than this,'' Mickelson said.
He had every reason to believe that. Five days ago, Mickelson was
on the verge of winning the Scottish Open until he blew a lead on
the back nine, then lost to unheralded Gregory Havret of France on
the first playoff hole at Loch Lomond. Even so, it was his first
time in contention, or even playing all four rounds, since winning
The Players Championship in May.
Was this a step back?
``I don't know. It's hard to say,'' Mickelson said. ``I've missed
a lot of cuts lately. I missed U.S. Open, Congressional, most likely
here. I better get better. I think my next tournament doesn't have a
cut, so that will be nice.''
That would be a World Golf Championship at Firestone. The
following week is the PGA Championship at Southern Hills, which will
be Mickelson's final chance to continue his streak of winning a
major each year that dates to his first one at the 2004 Masters.
As well as he plays Southern Hills, this is not an upward trend.
The 77 on Friday was the ninth straight round at a major that
Mickelson failed to break par, his longest stretch since he played
par or worse the final nine rounds of the 1999 season, which
included a missed cut at Carnoustie.
Mickelson no longer blames the left wrist he supposedly injured
at Oakmont, rather his putting.
``I was just never on line,'' he said.
It was evident on the 15th hole, where Mickelson three-putted
from about 60 feet to fall to 4 over par. First, he had caddie Jim
``Bones'' Mackay stand over the ball to make sure the line was the
same as Mickelson had in mind. Lefty grazed the left edge of the
cup, then missed the four-foot comeback putt.
He held the putter at both ends, looking as though he wanted to
snap it in half.
Although he made a solid par save from deep grass behind the 17th
green, his round ended on a sour note. After taking a drop from the
burn down the left side of the fairway, Mickelson hit three-wood to
the front of the green and left his first putt four feet short. The
bogey putt never even touched the hole.
``It was a really fair test,'' Mickelson said. ``There were
under-par scores out there; I just didn't putt well enough to have
one of them.''
He also ran into rule that applies only at the British Open.
Mickelson's approach to the second hole was imbedded in the right
rough, and when a ball is plugged, players usually get free relief.
The British Open rule is that imbedded lies only apply to those in
the closely mown areas of the course.
Mickelson had to put the ball back, then took a penalty drop for
an unplayable lie. The slope was so steep that he dropped it twice
and watched it roll closer to the hole, then had trouble making the
ball stay put even after he placed it.
He walked up to the green, and a few seconds later, the ball
rolled into a beautiful lie short of the green, but no closer to the
hole. It was a good break, even though it still led to bogey.
``The rule is it has to be stationary five seconds, which it
was,'' Mickelson said. ``And then after a minute or so, you just
play it where it lies unless I had addressed it, which I never
did.''
Then he paused to smile.
``Because I felt like it might roll,'' he added.
That was about the only thing that went right for him Friday.