Phil showing star quality in L.A.
By DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press


LOS ANGELES — Phil Mickelson seems determined to add Los Angeles to his collection of West Coast trophies.

A year after losing at Riviera in a playoff, Mickelson played golf as spectacular as the weather Friday in the Northern Trust Open, finishing with a 20-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a 7-under 64 and a four-shot lead.

Even after starting with a 68, Mickelson felt he was close to putting his game together. It started with a 3-iron to 12 feet on the par-5 first for a simple birdie, and built momentum with a 60-foot birdie on the fifth and never slowed.

When he finished his best score ever at Riviera, he was at 10-under 132 and in firm command going into the weekend.

“This is a tournament that has eluded me,” Mickelson said of the only city in the West Coast Swing where he hasn't won. “The West Coast means a lot to me.”

Robert Allenby, who won at Riviera in 2001 in the cold and rain, did OK in warm sunshine with a 66 that put him at 136 with Jeff Quinney, who made bogey on the final hole for a 67.

Mickelson and the top dozen players atop the leaderboard got one big break with the draw by playing early Thursday and in the afternoon Friday, essentially avoiding the strongest of the wind that gusted along the eucalyptus trees lining the fairways.

For those who faced a cold wind Thursday afternoon and more swirling breezes Friday morning, the best anyone could muster was David Toms (68) and Kevin Sutherland (69), each at 3-under 139.

“It was interesting, the last 27 holes that I’ve played with the wind and everything,” Toms said. “You certainly had to think about it on your club selection. It made a lot of the holes play very difficult. Overall, I’ll take the two rounds I’ve put on the board.”

For the second straight day, not everyone finished the round.

“So there will be a Saturday cut,” quipped Rory Sabbatini on his way to the 18th tee as the sun began to dip behind the hill, and players were still just making the turn.

The Players Advisory Council recommended another change in policy to a Saturday cut if the field is more than 78 players. If approved, that wouldn’t happen until Florida at the earliest. Otherwise, when the cut is more than 78 players, only the closest to 60 can play on the weekend, and the notorious “Rule 78” looked as though it could happen for the third time in five events.

The cut won’t be made until six players finish the second round Saturday morning.

Scott McCarron, a UCLA alum who nearly won this tournament in 2002, had a 65 and was part of a large group at 5-under 137 that included Scott Verplank, Chad Campbell and Vaughn Taylor.

Mickelson wasn’t about to practice posing with the trophy, and no one was conceding anything with 36 holes left to play on a course that was playing fast with the firm conditions.

“If Phil is at 10 under, that’s fine,” Allenby said. “There’s a long way to go. There’s still 36 holes to go and a lot of birdies out there. I’ve made plenty of birdies here before, so there’s no reason why I can’t do it on the weekend.”

Quinney will join Mickelson and Allenby in the final group. Quinney made a late surge up the leaderboard, including birdies on the 12th and 15th hole, but ran into trouble on the last hole.

Four shots behind the second-ranked player in golf can be daunting, but so is Riviera.

“You don’t have to shoot 8 under on Saturday,” Quinney said about the deficit. “If you get firm greens and the wind blows a little bit, a couple under can move you a long way.”

Even so, Mickelson appears to be hitting his stride.

He began pulling away after a three-putt bogey on the sixth hole, hitting wedge to 2 feet on No. 7 and a gap wedge with the breeze at his back on No. 9 to 12 feet. After going well left of the par-4 10th, he chipped to a 3 feet for birdie, then got up-and-down for his fourth birdie in five holes at the par-5 11th.

Even stronger was his finish, which began with a par.

Mickelson went long on the par-3 16th, leaving himself a downhill chip that went some 12 feet by the hole. He made that for his par, which kept momentum on his side for the closing holes.

“The biggest shot that set up those two birdies in the par putt on 16,” Mickelson said. “It kept momentum of the round going and it didn’t let the round kind of slip away.”

Mickelson didn’t have an answer for why is playing so well on a course that was rarely part of his rotation. He has won 15 times in California and Arizona during his career, but never on the course off Sunset Boulevard. Until last year, Mickelson only played this tournament eight times, missing the cut in half of them and never faring better than a tie for 15th.

He had a 54-hole lead last year and was on the verge of winning until a bogey on the 18th, then losing to Charles Howell III in extra holes. Now, he’s right back in the picture.

Mickelson has said this is one tournament he want to win, but kept that in perspective.

“I haven’t won the U.S. or British Open, either, and I really want to win those,” he said. “Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.”

Divots: The field featured 17 of the top 20 players in the world, but five of them missed the cut, and Sergio Garcia at 3 over was on the verge of going home under Rule 78. ... John Daly shot a 74 to finish at 1 over, but made his first cut of the year.



Scores with relation to par from the second round of the Northern Trust Open, played Feb. 15 at the par-71, 7,279-yard Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles (Note: play suspended due to darkness):

1. Phil Mickelson 68-64--132

-10
2. Robert Allenby 70-66--136

-6
2. Jeff Quinney 69-67--136

-6
4. Scott McCarron 72-65--137

-5
4. Chad Campbell 67-70--137

-5
4. Scott Verplank 68-69--137

-5
4. Billy Mayfair 68-69--137

-5
4. Vaughn Taylor 67-70--137

-5
9. Padraig Harrington 69-69--138

-4
9. K.J. Choi 65-73--138

-4
9. John Rollins 68-70--138

-4
9. Charlie Wi 70-68--138

-4
13. David Toms 71-68--139

-3
13. Kevin Sutherland 70-69--139

-3
13. Brandt Jobe 71-68--139

-3
13. Peter Lonard 69-70--139

-3
13. Bubba Watson 71-68--139

-3
13. Stuart Appleby 69-70--139

-3
13. Rory Sabbatini 72-67--139

-3
13. Luke Donald 68-71--139

-3
13. Zach Johnson 72-67--139

-3
13. Steve Marino 69-70--139

-3
23. Fred Couples 70-70--140

-2
23. Ryuji Imada 71-69--140

-2
23. Alex Cejka 68-72--140

-2
23. Steve Stricker 71-69--140

-2
23. Mark Wilson 70-70--140

-2
23. Brian Bateman 70-70--140

-2
23. J.B. Holmes 74-66--140

-2
30. Dustin Johnson 68-73--141

-1
30. Ben Curtis 70-71--141

-1
30. Joe Durant 71-70--141

-1
30. Charles Howell III 71-70--141

-1
30. George McNeill 72-69--141

-1
30. Angel Cabrera 68-73--141

-1
30. Lucas Glover 72-69--141

-1
30. Pat Perez 69-72--141

-1
38. Adam Scott 73-69--142

E
38. Kevin Na 66-76--142

E
38. Nathan Green 72-70--142

E
38. Steve Flesch 71-71--142

E
38. Hunter Mahan 68-74--142

E
43. Tag Ridings 75-68--143
+ 1
43. Vijay Singh 71-72--143
+ 1
43. Aaron Baddeley 73-70--143
+ 1
43. Paul Casey 73-70--143
+ 1
43. Ryan Moore 72-71--143
+ 1
43. Bill Haas 72-71--143
+ 1
43. John Daly 69-74--143
+ 1
43. Dean Wilson 71-72--143
+ 1
43. Eric Axley 71-72--143
+ 1
43. Bart Bryant 74-69--143
+ 1
43. Jason Gore 71-72--143
+ 1
43. Jeff Overton 74-69--143
+ 1
43. Craig Barlow 69-74--143
+ 1
43. Toru Taniguchi 72-71--143
+ 1
43. Cody Freeman 70-0--70
+ 1 thru 16
58. Mathew Goggin 73-71--144
+ 2
58. D.J. Trahan 70-74--144
+ 2
58. Carl Pettersson 70-74--144
+ 2
58. Ben Crane 70-74--144
+ 2
58. Chez Reavie 73-71--144
+ 2
58. Kevin Streelman 75-69--144
+ 2
58. Matt Kuchar 73-71--144
+ 2
58. Fred Funk 74-70--144
+ 2
58. Will MacKenzie 71-73--144
+ 2
58. Cameron Beckman 74-70--144
+ 2
58. Tom Pernice, Jr. 72-72--144
+ 2
58. Brad Adamonis 72-0--72
+ 2 thru 16
70. Shigeki Maruyama 71-74--145
+ 3
70. Kenny Perry 72-73--145
+ 3
70. Sergio Garcia 74-71--145
+ 3
70. Michael Allen 75-70--145
+ 3
70. Briny Baird 71-74--145
+ 3
70. Rocco Mediate 75-70--145
+ 3
70. Bo Van Pelt 71-74--145
+ 3
70. Fredrik Jacobson 72-73--145
+ 3
70. John Merrick 71-0--71
+ 3 thru 16
70. Marc Turnesa 75-0--75
+ 3 thru 16
80. Steve Elkington 73-73--146
+ 4
80. Brandt Snedeker 76-70--146
+ 4
80. Chris DiMarco 72-74--146
+ 4
80. Geoff Ogilvy 69-77--146
+ 4
80. J.J. Henry 76-70--146
+ 4
80. Johnson Wagner 75-71--146
+ 4
80. Heath Slocum 73-73--146
+ 4
87. Cliff Kresge 74-73--147
+ 5
87. Andres Romero 73-74--147
+ 5
87. Justin Rose 72-75--147
+ 5
87. Tim Clark 69-78--147
+ 5
87. Ken Duke 70-77--147
+ 5
87. Trevor Immelman 72-75--147
+ 5
87. Jeff Maggert 71-76--147
+ 5
87. Daniel Chopra 73-74--147
+ 5
87. Sean O'Hair 75-72--147
+ 5
87. Mark Hensby 74-73--147
+ 5
97. Troy Matteson 74-74--148
+ 6
97. Jason Bohn 75-73--148
+ 6
97. Tom Lehman 75-73--148
+ 6
97. Nick Watney 75-73--148
+ 6
97. Mike Weir 73-75--148
+ 6
97. Shingo Katayama 77-71--148
+ 6
97. Robert Garrigus 75-73--148
+ 6
97. Richard Johnson 73-75--148
+ 6
97. Camilo Villegas 74-74--148
+ 6
97. Nick Flanagan 74-74--148
+ 6
97. Jerry Kelly 72-76--148
+ 6
97. Brett Quigley 74-74--148
+ 6
97. Shane Bertsch 75-73--148
+ 6
97. Rod Pampling 73-75--148
+ 6
97. Charley Hoffman 77-71--148
+ 6
112. Y.E. Yang 72-77--149
+ 7
112. Tim Petrovic 73-76--149
+ 7
112. Joe Ogilvie 70-79--149
+ 7
112. Davis Love III 75-74--149
+ 7
112. Jim Furyk 76-73--149
+ 7
112. Corey Pavin 75-74--149
+ 7
112. Olin Browne 74-75--149
+ 7
119. Bob Estes 74-76--150
+ 8
119. Len Mattiace 77-73--150
+ 8
119. Anthony Kim 73-77--150
+ 8
119. Ryan Armour 75-75--150
+ 8
119. Nicholas Thompson 75-0--75
+ 8 thru 16
124. Shaun Micheel 76-75--151
+ 9
124. Brian Davis 74-77--151
+ 9
124. Brian Gay 75-76--151
+ 9
127. Charles Warren 71-81--152
+ 10
127. Lee Westwood 74-78--152
+ 10
127. Rich Beem 75-77--152
+ 10
130. Jay Williamson 75-78--153
+ 11
130. Tommy Armour III 79-74--153
+ 11
130. Drew Scott 75-78--153
+ 11
130. Todd Hamilton 77-76--153
+ 11
130. Robert Floyd 77-0--77
+ 11 thru 16
135. J.P. Hayes 79-75--154
+ 12
135. Billy Andrade 72-82--154
+ 12
137. Mathias Gronberg 79-76--155
+ 13
138. Retief Goosen 79-77--156
+ 14
139. Steve Lowery 79-78--157
+ 15
WD. John Mallinger 78-WD


WD. Nick O'Hern WD


WD. David Duval WD


DQ. Scott Mahlberg 78-76--DQ


DQ. J.L. Lewis 77-79--DQ




Posted: 2/15/2008
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