Showing posts with label phil mickelson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phil mickelson. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Amy Mickelson Diagnosed With Breast Cancer

Phil Mickelson has always put family before business, and right now the Mickelson family is dealing with some tough news. Amy Mickelson, the wife of the second-ranked golfer in the world, was diagnosed with breast cancer. Phil has canceled his golf schedule indefinitely to be with his wife.

According to a release from Mickelson's management company, his wife was to have more tests but begin treatment with major surgery as early as the next two weeks.

This is not the first time Mickelson has picked his family over golf. In 1999, during the final round of the U.S. Open, Mickelson was paired with Payne Stewart. Seeking his first major championship with Amy near her delivery date, Phil had his caddie, Jim MacKay carry a beeper in the golf bag in case she went into labor. He admitted he'd walk off the golf course if she beeped him.

Mickelson, the No. 2 player in the world with 36 career PGA Tour victories, was to play the Byron Nelson Championship this week before defending his title next week at Colonial. It was not certain if he would return in time for the U.S. Open on June 18-21 at Bethpage Black, where he was the runner-up to Tiger Woods in 2002 and is beloved by golf fans in the New York area.

Thoughts and prayers are with the Mickelson family.

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Sunday, April 12, 2009

Angel Cabrera Wins the 2009 Masters

The final day of the 2009 Masters certainly unfolded in a bizarre fashion, but after Kenny Perry pulled his second shot on the 10th hole left of the green and failed to get up and down, Angel Cabrera had two putts to win the tournament on the second sudden-death playoff hole and became the last golfer standing in a Sunday slugfest at Augusta.

Argentina's Angel Cabrera has won his second major after a nerve-jangling playoff victory at the US Masters, becoming the first South American to claim the prized Green Jacket.

Perry seemed locked to win the tournament, holding a two-stroke lead with just two holes to play, but he finished bogey-bogey down the stretch, allowing playing partner Cabrera and Chad Campbell to join him in a sudden-death playoff.

The most bizarre circumstance surrounding Cabrera's win -- outside his Sunday yellow becoming the "new red" -- might be his early Sunday play: he shot an inexplicable one-over on the front-nine Sunday, bogeyed 10 and appeared poised to free fall from the leaderboard before rattling off three birdies on the final six holes.

His first playoff hole was no less odd, as Cabrera managed to hit his second shot off a tree before scrambling back for a par that extended his hopes of winning the green jacket to the 10th hole.

The win was Cabrera's second major in the past three years -- in 2007 he was the first Argentinian to win the U.S. Open -- as he became the first Argentinian to don a green jacket in Augusta's rich history.

And as surprising as watching Cabrera storm back to win was, it seems like a pretty fitting ending considering the insanity that consumed Augusta on Sunday.

FINAL LEADERBOARD

Final round scores in the US Masters at the par-72 Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia on Monday:

276 Angel Cabrera (Argentina) 68 68 69 71 (Cabrera wins in second hole of sudden-death playoff), Kenny Perry (US) 68 67 70 71, Chad Campbell (US) 65 70 72 69

278 Shingo Katayama (Japan) 67 73 70 68

279 Phil Mickelson (US) 73 68 71 67

280 John Merrick (US) 68 74 72 66, Steve Flesch (US) 71 74 68 67, Tiger Woods (US) 70 72 70 68, Steve Stricker (US) 72 69 68 71

281 Hunter Mahan (US) 66 75 71 69, Sean O'Hair (US) 68 76 68 69, Jim Furyk (US) 66 74 68 73

282 Camilo Villegas (Colombia) 73 69 71 69, Tim Clark (South Africa) 68 71 72 71

283 Geoff Ogilvy (Australia) 71 70 73 69, Todd Hamilton (US) 68 70 72 73

284 Aaron Baddeley (Australia) 68 74 73 69, Graeme McDowell (Britain) 69 73 73 69

285 Nick Watney (US) 70 71 71 73

286 Paul Casey (Britain) 72 72 73 69, Ryuji Imada (Japan) 73 72 72 69, Trevor Immelman (South Africa) 71 74 72 69, Rory McIlroy (Britain) 72 73 71 70, Sandy Lyle (Britain) 72 70 73 71, Justin Rose (Britain) 74 70 71 71, Anthony Kim (US) 75 65 72 74, Stephen Ames (Canada) 73 68 71 74, Ian Poulter (Britain) 71 73 68 74, Rory Sabbatini (South Africa) 73 67 70 76

287 Ross Fisher (Britain) 69 76 73 69, Stuart Appleby (Australia) 72 73 71 71, Larry Mize (US) 67 76 72 72, Dustin Johnson (US) 72 70 72 73, Vijay Singh (Fiji) 71 70 72 74

288 Ben Curtis (US) 73 71 74 70, Ken Duke (US) 71 72 73 72, Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 69 73 73 73

289 Robert Allenby (Australia) 73 72 72 72, Henrik Stenson (Sweden) 71 70 75 73, Luke Donald (Britain) 73 71 72 73, Sergio Garcia (Spain) 73 67 75 74

290 Bubba Watson (US) 72 72 73 73

291 Lee Westwood (Britain) 70 72 70 79

292 Dudley Hart (US) 72 72 73 75

293 DJ Trahan (US) 72 73 72 76

294 Kevin Sutherland (US) 69 76 77 72, Mike Weir (Canada) 68 75 79 72, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spain) 70 73 78 73

297 Andres Romero (Argentina) 69 75 77 76

298 Rocco Mediate (US) 73 70 78 77

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