Phil Mickelson commits to Champions tour event in Tucson with eye on history

Phil Mickelson commits to Champions tour event in Tucson with eye on history https://ift.tt/eA8V8J

Phil Mickelson won the first two PGA Tour Champions events he entered.

He’ll try to make history next week when the tour visits Tucson: no golfer has ever won the first three tournaments he entered on any of the PGA Tour-sanctioned tours.

On Friday, Mickelson beat the entry deadline and will tee it up in the Cologuard Classic at Omni Tucson National. Mickelson confirmed to Golfweek via text that he will be playing in the event.

In many regards, he’ll be on familiar turf, as the former Arizona State standout has made many visits to Tucson over the years.

In 1991, Mickelson won the Northern Telecom Open in Tucson as an amateur. He remains the last amateur to win a PGA Tour event. In November, he teamed up with Charles Barkley at Stone Canyon Club to defeat Peyton Manning and Steph Curry in the Match III.

In college Mickelson’s ASU team had several battles with in-state rival Arizona, a team with Jim Furyk on its roster. Furyk has also committed to the Cologuard and will be playing it for the first time, having turned 50 after the 2020 version took place.

In 1992, Furyk and his Wildcats won the program’s first team national title at the University of New Mexico golf course, and had to deal with ASU a few times along the way.

“That year, the two best teams in college golf were Arizona and Arizona State,” Furyk said on Wednesday after a practice round at the Genesis Invitational near Los Angeles. “We battled them out in Regionals and then battled them in the NC-2-As, so to beat your rival, a team that had Phil Mickelson, at the time the best college player in the country … to battle them and win the national championship. … yea a lot of good memories.”

Furyk also won his first two times out on the Champions tour but Mickelson will look to one-up him. Again.

“He won at three individual (NCAA) titles and they (ASU) also won a team title while he was in school, so I think he’s kinda upped me a little there,” said Fuyrk. “It’s tough to dig in and needle on that one.”

Former major league pitcher John Smoltz is also in the field. He’ll play the event for the third year in a row on a sponsor exemption. Bernhard Langer is the defending champion.

from Golfweek https://ift.tt/2ZuYXNB
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