May 19, 2013

Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open

c0f8cf1f026db77f60ea023ab5d0d8fa Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open
reacts after missing his on the that would have given him a round of 59 during the first round of the Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale on January 31, 2013 in Scottsdale, Arizona.
(January 30, 2013 – Source: Hunter Martin/ North America)

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Phil Mickelson missed out on a 59 by a fraction of an inch Thursday in the first round of the Phoenix Open.

Mickelson had a chance to become the sixth player in PGA to break 60 with a 25- attempt on his last hole, the par-4 ninth at TPC Scottsdale. The putt looked good all the way, and Mickelson pointed his putter at the cup as he prepared to celebrate.

Right at the end, though, the ball caught the right edge of the cup, curled 180 degrees to the other side of the hole and stayed out.

to go, it was in the center,” Mickelson said. “ to go, it was in the center. A foot to go, it was in the center, and even as it’s approaching the hole, I couldn’t envision which side of the hole it could possibly miss on, and it ended up somehow just dying off at the end, catching the lip. At that speed, to lip out as much as it did is very rare.

“I’m excited to shoot 60, but to see that last putt lip out the way it did and not go in, it’s crushing because you don’t get that chance very often to shoot 59.”

His , , fell to his knees and stayed there several seconds.

“He could not have hit a better putt,” Mackay said.

and thought it was going in, too.

“Unlucky. He was walking it in,” Dufner said.

“I thought it was in,” Fowler said. “I was pulling for him, trying to stay out of his way.”

Mickelson settled for an 11-under 60, matching the tournament record he already shared with Grant Waite and .

“Well, 60 is awesome,” Mickelson said. “Last time I shot 60 here in `05, I birdied like the last three or just to do that, and I was ecstatic, and I’m ecstatic to shoot 60. But there’s a big difference between 60 and 59. Not that big between 60 and 61, there really isn’t. But there’s a big barrier, a Berlin Wall barrier, between 59 and 60.

“I shot it in the PGA Grand Slam of . I shot 58 in a practice round. But to do it in a tournament would have been historic for me, something I’d always remember, and I’ll always remember that putt on the last hole probably, too.”

He also parred the par-4 eighth – leaving an 18-footer a rotation short – after reaching 11 under with a 7-foot on the par-3 seventh.

“That putt is so fast down to that right pin because it’s going toward the valley, it’s downhill and down grain,” Mickelson said. “I thought, I can’t leave it short, so I just got it right on line and it was tracking and it pulled up short.”

He was thinking about breaking 60 all through his final holes.

“(When) I birdied three and four, `Done deal I’m going to get this done,”‘ Mickelson said. “Very disappointed that I wasn’t able to birdie the last couple. … I just knew I could do it, and darn it, it just lipped out.”

Mackay didn’t say a word about a 59, treating it like a baseball pitcher with a no-hitter.

“I’m handing him the putter and just totally getting away from him,” Mackay said. “He’s comfortable, he likes that kind of stage, and he’s not scared.”

In perfect conditions on the course softened by weekend rain, Mickelson birdied the first and reached 8 under with another four-birdie run capped by a 20-footer on the par-4 first – his 10th hole of the round. He added birdies on par-5 third and par-3 fourth.

The former Arizona State star struggled in his first two events this year and also caused a sensation by saying new federal and state tax rates kept him from being part of the San Diego Padres’ ownership group and might cause him to move away from California. He tied for 51st last week at Torrey Pines in his hometown event after opening the season with a tie for 37th in La Quinta.

Five players have shot 59 in official PGA Tour events. Al Geiberger did it in the 1977 Memphis Classic, Chip Beck in the 1991 Las Vegas Invitational, David Duval in the 1999 Bob Hope Invitational, Paul Goydos in the 2010 John Deere Classic and Stuart Appleby in the 2010 Greenbrier Classic. Japan’s Ryo Ishikawa has the lowest round on a major tour, shooting a 12-under 58 to win the 2010 Crowns on the Japan Tour.

Bo Van Pelt had a 59 in the pro-am Wednesday at TPC Scottsdale, a round that Mickelson watched closely from the group behind.

“He hit a shot on 17, he was 9 under at the time, and he hit a drive that hit the pin and ended up a foot,” Mickelson said. “It should have gone in. And I kind of got into him, I said, `Look, I don’t care when it is, get a 3, make a 3 on the last hole because you don’t get a chance to shoot 59.’ Here I am the next day making a 4.”

Mickelson had a four-stroke lead over Ryan Palmer, Brandt Snedeker, Padraig Harrington and Ted Potter Jr. with half the players still on the course.

Fowler and Dufner shot 68.

Vijay Singh withdrew before the round, a day after saying he used deer-antler spray and was “absolutely shocked” that it may contain a banned substance.

The 49-year-old Fijian cited a back injury. He faces possible sanctions from the tour.

Singh first revealed he used the spray in an interview with Sports Illustrated. The magazine said Singh paid one of the owners of Sports With Alternatives To Steroids $9,000 last November for the spray, hologram chips and other products. The company says its deer-antler substance contains a banned performance-enhancer connected to human growth hormone.

The start of play was delayed an hour because of frost.

Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open is a post from: PhatzRadio.com

 Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open  Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open  Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open  Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open  Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open

 Golf: Phil Mickelson barely misses 59 at Phoenix Open

Irene’s death toll jumps as towns battle floods

833945452c1c8a4e798a700a4ff96dea Irenes death toll jumps as towns battle floods

NEWFANE, Vt. (AP) – Entire towns in Vermont and New York remained cut off by flooding, some communities were still warily watching swollen rivers and over a million people from Virginia to Maine had no electricity on Tuesday, three days after slammed into the .

The storm has been blamed for at least 40 deaths in 11 states.

in New York City and New Jersey got back to their routines Tuesday, as most train service resumed.

MORE: State-by-state coverage of Irene
PHOTOS: Hurricane Irene pummels eastern USA
INTERACTIVE: Follow Irene’s path

When Hurricane Irene unleashed its wrath on Newfane, Vt., Martin and Sue Saylor were among the lucky ones. All they lost was the road to their hillside home, and their utilities.

The Saylors survived, but at a cost: Rivers of rainwater coursed down their hill, washing out the road that leads to their road. Just below their home deep in the woods, the Rock River rose up out of its banks, claiming another roadway.

Suddenly, the Saylors’ feet became their sole transportation.

“Stranded, nowhere to go,” said Martin Saylor, 57, standing by the Rock River on Monday, waiting for his brother to bring in supplies. “Don’t want to leave my house because I don’t know who’s going to break in or whatever. I just don’t know what to do.”

The capricious storm, which veered into Vermont in its final hours, dumped up to 11 inches of rain in some places and turned placid little mountain streams into roaring brown torrents that smashed buildings, ripped homes from their foundation and washed out roads all across the state.

Some Vermont rivers still haven’t reached their peak.

On Monday, the Otter Creek at Rutland was still more than above , and meteorologist Andrew Loconto said projections are the river won’t drop below until Wednesday.

At died in Vermont.

In New York City, where people had braced for a disaster-movie scene of water swirling around skyscrapers, the subways and buses were up and running again in time for the Monday morning commute. And to the surprise of many New Yorkers, things went pretty smoothly.

Power outages were still widespread from north to south, with utilities from Virginia to Maine reporting well over a million customers without electricity.

By Tuesday, a majority of riders on the hard-hit Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North Railroad were able to get onto trains. Only three of the LIRR lines were still suspended, covering the eastern end of the Long Island.

The 11-state death toll, which had stood at 21 as of Sunday night, rose sharply as bodies were pulled from floodwaters and people were electrocuted by downed power lines.

An apparently vacant home exploded in an evacuated, flooded area in Pompton Lakes, N.J., early Monday, and firefighters had to battle the flames from a boat. In the Albany, N.Y., suburb of Guilderland, police rescued two people Monday after their car was swept away. Rescuers found them three hours later, clinging to trees along the swollen creek.

“It’s going to take time to recover from a storm of this magnitude,” President Obama warned as he promised the government would do everything in its power to help people get back on their feet.

In North Carolina, where Irene blew ashore along the Outer Banks on Saturday before heading for New York and New England, 1,000 people were still in emergency shelters, awaiting word on their homes.

Airlines said it would be days before the thousands of passengers stranded by Irene find their way home. Some Amtrak service in the Northeast was limited or suspended. Commuter train service between New Jersey and New York City resumed Tuesday, except for one line that was still dealing with flooding.

Throughout the region, hundreds of roads were impassable because of flooding or fallen trees, and some bridges had simply given way, including a 156-year-old hand-hewn, wooden covered bridge across Schoharie Creek in Blenheim, N.Y.

At least three towns in New York remained cut off by flooded roads and bridges.

Early estimates put Irene’s damage at $7 billion to $10 billion, much smaller than the impact of monster storms such as Hurricane Katrina, which did more than $100 billion in damage. Irene’s effects are small compared to the overall U.S. economy, which produces about $14 trillion worth of goods and services every year.

While people without electric power waited for the lights to come back on and communities from New York to Maine took stock of the storm, homeowners and towns in land-locked Vermont faced a sobering new reality — no way in or out. Washed-out roads and bridges left them — for now — inaccessible by automobile.

“We always had that truism that said ‘Yup, yah can’t get there from here.’ In fact, that’s come to pass down here,” said Newfane Town Clerk Gloria Cristelli. “There are certain pockets where you can’t get there from here, at least not by a car.”

About a dozen towns and an unknown number of homes were cut off by damage from Irene’s floodwaters and rain, including that of the town’s emergency management coordinator, David Moore. State transportation maintenance crews and contractors hired by the state were working to restore travel on some of the 260 roads that had been closed due to storm damage. Vermont also had 30 highway bridges closed.

In small Newfane (pop. 1,710), the storm’s effects were staggering: About 150 people were unable to drive cars to their homes, 30 of them effectively stranded in theirs, seven bridges were washed out, two homes were knocked from their foundations by surging floodwaters and one 19th century grist mill smashed into kindling wood right where it stood.

Gov. Peter Shumlin called it the worst flooding in a century.

For the Saylors, there were more immediate concerns.

“I need a shower,” said Sue Saylor. “I need water. I need electricity. It’s rough.”