— Sports

Mickelson misses cut and is worried about lack of focus

PALM HARBOR, Fla. (AP) – Phil Mickelson said he struggles to concentrate on the golf course, leading to short spells that numb his mind. One such example came Friday at the end of his round, which cost him at the Valspar Championship.

Two bogeys over the last three holes led to Mickelson missing the cut by one shot.

Mickelson opened with a 73 after dropping three shots in three holes on his back nine. He rallied Friday with three straight birdies and was one shot inside the cut line when it all fell apart on the closing holes at Innisbrook.

From 40 feet off the 16th green, he hammered a putt some 8 feet by the hole and missed the next one to take a bogey. And on the 18th, he missed his drive well to the left into the trees, advanced it to some 70 yards, and missed an 8-foot par putt that would have kept him around.

His 69 for an even-par 142 led to his third missed cut of the year.

“I know what my problem is. I’m not physically able to keep my focus,” Mickelson said. “As I’ve gotten older, I have a hard time focusing. And that’s my challenge right now. I’m trying all different things to elongate my ability to stay focused or refocus.” Mickelson, who turns 51 in June, has gone more than two years since his last victory, and now he’s not even contending. Since his runner-up finished in the FedEx St. Jude Invitational nine months ago, he has not completed in the top 20.

Mickelson singled out noise in the gallery – the PGA Tour has had limited spectators for the last two months – and there have been plenty of distractions. He had to ask one spectator to put away a phone on the 18th hole Thursday when he made a bogey.

On another hole, a ringing phone led Mickelson to back away and suggest the fan take the phone from his pocket, instructing him that the switch on the left side controlled the volume.

cell phones ringing or people yelling or something, my physical ability to refocus – to back away and then refocus and so forth – I’m physically unable to do it right now,” Mickelson said. “So I have to find techniques to do that.”

Mickelson is playing next week at the Wells Fargo Championship, and then he has the PGA Championship in two weeks, where he is exempt for life as a past champion.

Still on the horizon is the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines. Mickelson had said last year that he would not take a special exemption before the U.S. Open had to do away with qualifying because of the pandemic. He is scheduled for 36-hole qualifying in Ohio the Monday after the Memorial.

It is not known if Mickelson has even asked for one. The last time the USGA awarded an exemption to a player who was not a past U.S. Open champion was Vijay Singh in 2010.

Mickelson is No. 113 in the world.

In the meantime, he said he is “meeting with many people” to solve his concentration problems.

“But I go through spells of three or four holes like I did Thursday, Friday at Augusta, where I’ll throw five, six shots away in a four-hole stretch, and I just kind of go mind numb, and my ability to regain focus has been the biggest challenge as I’ve gotten older,” he said. “I don’t have a great solution right now. But I’m working on it.”

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Molly Aronson

I'm an award-winning blogger who enjoys all things creative but is especially passionate about lifestyle design. I blog over at mehlogy.com I love that I get to share my passion for healthy living, fashion, fitness, and travel with readers from all over the world.

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