When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
“I forget how much I’ve missed having her out here.”
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"If I'd been the sheik coughing up the reported $1.5 million appearance fee to get him there I would not have been happy."
/Phil Wavering On Match Play; Finchem Wonders Out-Loud If He Can Dock Mickelson Brood's Allowance
/Fellow Five Guys Investors Breathe Sigh: Phil Confirms Falling Off Vegetarian Wagon
/Stevie Must Be Horrified: Bones Works As Camera Assistant
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"Being Bones"
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And The Hits Keep Coming: Phil To Launch '11 Season In UAE
/Phil Rethinking The Whole In-N-Out Boycott Thing
/Golf Digest Scooped: Butch's Guide To Tiger's Gamesmanship Techniques (And How They Can Help You Psych-Out Your Hated Rivals)
/“Two things you don’t want to hear as a player, Rees Jones and Sub-air.”
/Battle Of The Computer-Generated Suspense: Phil Going For #1 Versus Jason Day Vying For #1
/Which faux quest for supremacy will be more exciting Monday: Phil Mickelson trying to grab the top spot in the world golf ranking or Jason Day looking to vault to the top spot in the FedEx Cup.
Phil "Opts Out" Of Pro-Am; Has To Sit Through Corporate Drone Dinner Instead
/Thanks to reader Mel for Rex Hoggard's post on Phil Mickelson's withdrawal from Thursday's Deutsche Bank Pro-Am.
Unlike Furyk, however, Mickelson’s withdrawal will not cost him a spot at the second playoff event because Lefty used a special option that allows top players to miss a pro-am. Instead the player must participate in an “alternative sponsor function.”
Translation: long dinner pretending to be interested.
Players who finished in the top 20 on the previous year’s money or FedEx Cup lists have two pro-am opt outs that are contingent on sponsor approval. Mickelson used his first opt out earlier this year at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and instead had dinner with a handful of corporate clients.
According to Andy Pazder, the Tour’s senior vice president of tournament administration, this is the first year of the opt out provision and only about “a half dozen” players have used it.
“In a pro-am three or four amateurs are going to get five hours with Phil on the golf course, which is great, but maybe it’s better if you have a dinner with 20 executives and clients for two or three hours,” Pazder said. “Maybe that’s a better use of a player’s time.”
Hoggard followed up with this Tweet: