Jump to content
2024 US Open WITB Photos ×

ASAP Sports Interview Transcripts-Final Round 2006 US Open


Gxgolfer

Recommended Posts

Visit sites for Audio MP3 versions
GEOFF OGILVY

U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP

June 18, 2006
Final Round


= Click for MP3 Audio

An interview with:

GEOFF OGILVY

Q. How does it feel to be the U.S. Open champion?

GEOFF OGILVY: I don't know. It's hard to I don't know. It's slightly sinking in. Pretty special.

Q. Talk about the chronology of coming down and seeing what happened with Phil, and maybe from your 17th hole?

GEOFF OGILVY: 17, I thought I was in a bit of trouble. Obviously I was way in the boonies, had a terrible lie, tried to go for a bit too much but thought I had to at that point. I thought 4 under was going to be the number because Monty just made birdie on 17, and I thought one of them was going to finish at about 3 or 4. Left it in the rough, missed the green. Yeah, wow, chipped it in. Just scary. What do you say? I mean, a shot that you wait your whole life to chip it in in a situation like that when you need to, and then you do.

Monty was on the fairway on 18, and I thought he's going to hit the green and make a 4 and I'll have to make a birdie. I hit the best drive I hit all week right there. It wasn't in a divot; it was my end of a divot, so it didn't really affect how I hit the ball. It might have slowed the ball down because of the sand, but in the air I thought it was going pretty close, I have to say. I was pretty happy with my second shot.

After the first time all week it kind of hits and spins back. There have been some big bounces out here so it's weird. It's flying another foot, it's right down the hill. I thought I'll get this up and down and I'll lose by a shot, that's what I thought. It was a tricky chip shot, and I hit a good shot and made the putt, and I thought 2nd in the Open is pretty good. That's a good spot.

Phil is probably going to think about that one for a while because that's hard to swallow. I thought I would make a playoff because 18 is a hard hole, but I never thought that would happen.

Q. What was your mindset going through watching?

GEOFF OGILVY: I was in the scorer's hut trying to process how I'm going to finish 1st or 2nd in the U.S. Open, this is pretty good. Then I see he drives it in the trees, and I thought, well, we might make a playoff here, change the hotel, stay all day tomorrow and then fly back. That's kind of weird.

I don't know. I watched it kind of in the background; I didn't know what was going on. I thought I had a third shot and he lands in the bunker like that because it's the first one I saw all week do that. I think I was the beneficiary of a little bit of charity. I think I got a bit lucky.

Q. One of your peers said he likes the attitude you bring to a major championship and that you've brought the last year or so. Do you treat it like any other tournament?

GEOFF OGILVY: I don't know. For some bizarre reason, the last five majors starting at Pinehurst last year, I've played better at majors than I had been playing around that point. I don't know why. Pinehurst I got more out of my game than I should have and finished 25th or something. You guys probably already checked that out.

St. Andrews I played really well, just finished off birdied three of the last four holes in the Open, that's pretty special. That gave me a lot of confidence.

Baltusrol I finished just in front of Tiger. I was the leader in the clubhouse and then he birdied the last hole, the par 5, to get one in front of me. At that point it looked good because the weather was coming in. I wasn't going to win, but it was close.

At Christmastime I knew I was exempt in all four. At the start of the year I knew I was getting in all of them. I set my mind about thinking about it and what I needed to do. For some bizarre reason I get if I'm 2 over after five holes in a normal PGA TOUR event, I'm pretty stroppy. Here at a major it hasn't been affecting me so much. Maybe because I know everyone else is struggling or that you've got no chance unless you bring your best sort of patience and attitude. I can't explain why.

To be honest with you, I don't know. I mean, this is the last one I would have thought I was going to win because I don't drive it very straight and I demonstrated that on the last nine holes. I didn't drive it very straight. But I've always been decent at grinding it out when par has been a good score. If you really set your mind to it and have the right attitude about it, it can be quite enjoyable. It's obviously hard work, but it's quite enjoyable when you feel like you're really, really struggling and you look at the leaderboard and everyone else is making bogeys and stuff.

We don't do it very often, and you're treading water making bogeys. Usually you're sinking pretty fast. A difference in the challenge out here. The greens here are so well designed, you've just got to play the hole backwards before you start. You've got to know if you're going to miss the tee shots you're going to miss the shots because they're narrow, extremely narrow. So if you're going to miss it, you've got to miss it on the correct side so you can run it up near the green to a spot where you're going to have a chance of getting it up and down.

On a good golf course you have to think backwards like that. Augusta National you have to think backwards. I like a golf course that makes you think that way. St. Andrews makes you do that.

I enjoy that aspect of golf, you know, just really plotting my way around there and thinking about it.

Q. You're going to be the first Australian since '95 to win a major.

GEOFF OGILVY: Yeah, it's pretty scary. I knew it would come, and the Australian press has been starting to ask the question, when is it going to happen. I honestly didn't think it would be me. I thought Scottie or Stuey or a few other guys in front of me. Adam has been up there, and the last few years we've had some top 4 or 5s in probably every major every year, Hensby and Pamps had a good Open, and the British Open, we've always had someone there.

The PGA, we always seem to have a guy there, so it was only a matter of time. I didn't think it was going to be me, but you never think it's going to be you. It's kind of bizarre.

End of FastScripts.

U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP

June 18, 2006
Final Round


= Click for MP3 Audio

An interview with:

GEOFF OGILVY

RAND JERRIS: It's a pleasure to welcome to the interview room the 106th United States Open champion Geoff Ogilvy with a round of 72 this afternoon, 285 for the championship. There's a trophy sitting here between us with some pretty special names, Bob Jones, Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer. Share with me what it feels like to know your name is going to be the next one on the trophy forever.

GEOFF OGILVY: It's pretty hard to believe. Obviously you dream about winning major championships, and to actually have it happen...

Once it sinks in, it's pretty special. It's starting to sink in. It's a pretty nice feeling.

RAND JERRIS: It's a difficult afternoon out there, lots of lows, but some high points, as well. Share with us your thoughts for the closing holes.

GEOFF OGILVY: Yeah, obviously I started the round great. I was a couple under after 6, I think. I just missed the fairways on 8 and 9 and made bogeys there. Everyone kind of started well and then kind of started struggling. I made a poor bogey on 11; I wasn't very happy with that.

A good up and down on the par 3.

14, I was right up against the edge of the rough and I had a sand iron to the green. I felt my chance kind slipping away a little bit because I saw Phil hit it close on 14, and I thought he's going to make birdie there and I'll be a couple behind here, and it's going to be pretty hard.

I thought maybe 4 over was going to be the number. Pretty hard to have a birdie these last three holes.

16, I drove it in the rough again and I chipped it out and made a good up and down for par.

17 is the birdiable one out of the throw. I hit a drive to the left, had a terrible lie off the fairway. At that point, after I hit my second shot there, I'm still in the long stuff 100 yards from the green, and it's not really looking very good here. Let's get some damage control and get in as good as you can.

I actually hit a pretty decent shot and missed the green, but pretty close to catching the slope and having a 10 or 12 footer. I was just hung up in the rough, and I thought now you're really done for.

My caddie, Squirrel, he said, "Just chip it in. Why don't you just chip it in (laughter)." You wait your whole life to have a chance to chip one in the last three holes of a major, but when you do it, it took me by surprise a little bit. You try to make it go in, but you don't expect it.

Then on 18, I thought, well, if I knew Monty had hit the fairway, and he was at 4 and I was at 5, I thought he's on the fairway, he's going to make a 4 or a 3. I started almost patting Monty on the back earlier. I thought it was pretty impressive because he was 1 under for the day at that point. That's pretty good golf right there.

Then I saw him three putt and I figured he made bogey. I thought, "Well, now Phil is the only one in front of me." I thought, "If you can get it close here and make birdie, you have a chance." I knew Phil had parred 17 before I even hit off the 18th tee.

Then hit a great shot, kind of ballooned a bit, but I still thought it was good. It was all over the pin and it needed to go forward another couple of feet, and I thought I had hit my career shot there. But it caught a soft bounce and came all the way back down the hill. And then I thought I was really done for. I mean, you're not going to do it from here.

I hit the chip shot that I had to hit and made the putt that I had to make. I thought, "Make this and come in second in the Open on your own. That's a pretty good result."

I was hitting that putt thinking this may get me in a playoff. I mean, I was pretty nervy over it, it was a pretty big putt. But I never thought Phil would make bogey at the last. He ended up making double, and it's got to be a hard one to swallow for Phil because he's obviously been the outstanding player at majors in the last eight or nine months. Ever since Augusta, he's been playing well in majors. The first time he won Augusta, he's been there most every time.

He's obviously worked out the major formula, he'll hit it on the green, make a par, make New York happy, but it worked out in my favor. Sometimes things go your way and sometimes they don't, and I'm glad it happened in the U.S. Open.

Q. Can you talk a bit about whether it helped playing with a pink Ian Poulter and whether that took some of the tension away from you?

GEOFF OGILVY: Well, what can you say? A guy turns up with a pink golf bag and pink pants. My caddie actually said, "What do you think Ian is going to wear tomorrow," because it's the last day of a major and you knew he was going to wear something that everybody notices. He's been quite calm with what he was wearing this week. It's all pink, the bag and everything. It kept the New Yorkers pretty happy. They had quite a bit to say. It was quite entertaining hearing what they were coming up with.

I guess in New York they're going to yell at somebody, and they tended to yell at the guy who's dressed in pink (laughter).

Q. Does this make up for the Brazil result? And when did you realize, I'm going to win this?

GEOFF OGILVY: When he buried it in the bunker on the last hole and he had to get it up and down out of there to do it. I thought I've got every chance here. I thought something silly is going to happen, he's going to hit it stiff and we're going to play tomorrow. But that wasn't a very good spot where he hit it there. He got pretty unlucky obviously. If he's no normally Phil gets it up and down because he's the best in the world at that. When he buried it in the bunker, I thought this is actually starting to shape up all right.

The Brazil game, disappointing. Obviously I thought we looked fantastic. We looked a really good football team this morning. Not a bad result, now the draw gets us through to Croatia, that's all we needed to do, stop the white wash so we could get through. They looked a pretty strong team. Obviously I'm only talking to the Australians and the English in here, but I was very impressed. I thought they did very well actually.

Q. We've talked often with you this year about the fact it's been 11 years since an Australian won a major. Did you ever believe you would be the person to win that major?

GEOFF OGILVY: I thought there was a chance that I would. I didn't think I would be the first one. Stuart has had his hand up for a while as one of the best players in the world. Adam is obviously on the path to stardom. At some point, he's just going to fall into it, because every time I play with him, it's like, this guy is unbelievable. He's such a fantastic player.

I have to be honest, I thought this was his week. He's been Top 5 the last four tournaments. I thought he'd probably be the first, or Stuart, to break this 10 or 11 year thing or whatever it is.

I thought there was a chance that I would do it one day. I thought I was the type of golfer who may strike it lucky one day or strike a hole or whatever you want to say. Honestly, you don't think about stuff like that, do you? You don't think you're going to be first. You think about winning one, but it feels like when I play with all these other guys, there's a lot of people who are better than me. It seems like it anyway. Other people always look like they're playing better than you.

Q. You must have dreamed of winning one.

GEOFF OGILVY: Of course. Every Australian of my age or any Australian really who grew up watching golf in the '80s and '90s, watching Greg play, it became pretty apparent that the majors were a pretty big deal, and this is really what we want to do. If it wasn't for Greg, we might not have an appreciation for how big these things really are.

Yeah, as soon as you start seeing the first memory was Greg actually at Winged Foot with Fuzzy waving the towel, that was one of the first golf tapes that I ever like kept watching again because I was only about seven or eight. But I remember watching that quite a few times. He made some ridiculous pars the last few holes, even more ridiculous than mine.

Obviously you dream about it. Everyone who plays golf dreams about winning a major.

Q. Following up on the Australian angle, given what happened to Greg in this major and other majors and the way this one turned out, is there a certain kind of Australian justice in this outcome?

GEOFF OGILVY: Yeah, I kind of feel bad that no one ever did this for Greg, you know. He held his hand up a lot of times in the last few holes and no one ever looked after him. No one ever gave him the luck I got today on the last few holes. I feel bad for Greg. Everybody knows he was pretty hard hit by it.

If that was Phil, he would have holed out to win by a shot (laughter). Everyone in Australia has got a fair soft spot for Greg in the majors. Ironic that I ended up winning it in a way, I guess.

Q. Can you define your relationship with Greg and if and how he's reached out to you in the past?

GEOFF OGILVY: I've played with him five, six times, been around to his house for a barbecue. I know him well enough, but I don't I'm just a bit too young to have really like known him. He was just kind of winding it down a little bit, getting injuries and stuff. When I first came out, he wasn't playing as much as I was. I know him well enough and I've played with him a few times. Most Australian guys here know him and he's still a hero for them. It's like Arnold, that's what Greg is to Australia.

He's been nothing but nice to me, you know.

Q. Geoff, congratulations, mate. What do you think this will do for Australian golf and most of the other Australians in the field, most of them with their PGA TOUR card, particularly Australian golf?

GEOFF OGILVY: Hopefully Australians will win four majors in a row or something, who knows. Australian golf has been struggling the last two or three years. There's five different guys who have won already this year. That's pretty impressive for a country with 18 million people or 19 million people. Hard to explain why it's so good at the moment.

Again, it's a snowball effect. One guy plays well we all used to go to Europe, but now everyone seems to come here because this really is the only place to play at the end of the day if you want to prepare for the majors.

Now everyone is coming here it seems like to see if they can get in as part of golf on the U.S. Tour. I mean, I don't know, Australian golf is pretty strong at the moment. Hopefully we get a bunch of majors in the next four or five years. There's plenty of guys that can do it.

Q. Geoff, was this a bit of a reaction to a Kiwi winning last year? And is the balance of power sort of shifting? This is now three southern hemisphere players in a row, five of the last ten, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa. Is the balance of power even now in this game?

GEOFF OGILVY: I think so. You look at Ryder Cup results and Presidents Cup results, it's always pretty clear that it's pretty close. I don't know what the World Rankings look like, but if you took the top 50, there's a fair percentage of them that aren't from here, that are from South Africa, from the UK, from Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, everywhere.

I think it is pretty balanced at the moment with the strength of golf everywhere. I mean, the U.S. obviously has the two best players in the world at the moment. But Australia has a few sort of sneaking into the top 20. I mean, Adam is ranked 6th, I think, in the world. It's pretty balanced at the moment. It's good for the game, I think, when pretty much in the biggest tournaments in the world there's a little part of everywhere that's represented. There's a little part of South Africans and Australians, and any given week there's someone from somewhere else in the world that can win, and that's good for the game. It's going to grow the game around the world, and that's a good thing.

Q. Can you tell us where you were watching Phil play that last hole and what that scene was like for you?

GEOFF OGILVY: Yeah, it was pretty surreal. How many times do you watch a telecast and you watch the guy who's just finished, watch the guy come up the last. I must have done it a thousand times, watching the guy watching the TV (laughter). And that was me (laughter).

I was watching it in the scorer's hut for most of it. I just signed my card and sat there. There was a TV in there. Then they moved me into the locker room because I guess probably give Phil a bit of space. He didn't want me sitting in his chair when he came into the scorer's hut. Then I got out there and watched the actual moment when Phil didn't chip it in in the locker room.

Q. You've won a major and your life is certainly going to change. How do you think you're going to cope with that?

GEOFF OGILVY: Hopefully well. Hopefully well. Hopefully I don't change at all. I mean, I'll be a more confident player and on my resume it looks better to know that I did it. Hopefully I don't change very much. I don't really want to. Hopefully I don't have a post bash major slump. I've never won a major so I don't know how I'm going to go from now on.

But I'm taking a bit of time off the next few weeks to get ready for Hoylake. It's going to actually be my next golf tournament actually. A few weeks to think about it, let it sink in. British Open is one of my favorite tournaments in the world. Hopefully I can play well there again.

Q. Forgive me, but I didn't get a chance to see that chip on 17. Can you just kind of set it up for me, exactly where the ball stopped and how many feet you were shooting at and what the loft was on the club?

GEOFF OGILVY: It was my lob wedge, 60 degrees. It was in the semi rough, not the heavy stuff, but it was kind of near the heavy rough. The heavy stuff was kind of four inches behind my ball, which made it a little bit more awkward than you'd want it. It was a 30 foot chip shot, 25 foot chip shot, downhill, left to right. I put about four putts on the back nine that looked like they were going in and they missed low, dived low right at the end. This chip shot looked low the whole way. I thought it was going to miss low the whole way, and for some bizarre reason, it hung on and went in. It's just, wow. You try to chip it in, but when it does go in, it's pretty surprising.

Q. Was it from the front right?

GEOFF OGILVY: I was chipping from just short of pin high left.

Q. Because of where this event falls in the calendar in America, we have to ask this question every year of the winner. What role, if any, did your father have in your golf career?

GEOFF OGILVY: He started it off, I guess. He gave me a little cut down golf club or a little set of golf courses golf clubs, and I guess I showed a little interest. We'd go down to the local muni and play whatever he let me play, every few weeks. I guess it was fairly apparent early on that I had a pretty strong interest in the game. This was about six or seven, I guess.

I think his love of the game grew as mine did. I think he was about a 20 handicap or 18 handicap when I started getting into it, and he ended up getting down to about a 7, was probably his lowest. He's probably about a 10 now. Probably the first 150 games I ever played were with him, because if I didn't play with him, I didn't get to play golf, because when you're eight years old or ten years old, you just can't walk up and play golf. You have to have someone to play with.

Q. Which club did you grow up playing at?

GEOFF OGILVY: The first bunch of golf I ever played was at Sandringham Golf Course, which is the golf course across the road from Royal Melbourne. You turn right in the gate of Royal Melbourne, you turn left to go to Royal Ann. You'd pay eight bucks to play there on Saturdays. Then I joined Cheltenham Golf Club, which is right next door to Victoria Golf Club, which is the golf course I'm still a member of today.

Q. Talk about your mental process and how it's improved over the years. Can you pinpoint why and what happened to help you in that process?

GEOFF OGILVY: There was not like a lightbulb, it wasn't like an epiphany or anything. It was just a gradual realization that for the most part the best players out here are the best because they're the best up here. It's just the maturing process. If you're at 18, you don't want to hear that; you just want to hear you've got to hit the ball good and then it'll take care of itself. You go through and you play with guys, you do it yourself, you kind of self destruct and you get down on yourself.

And then you play with guys and see it from another perspective and see another guy self destruct and kind of get in his own way, if you like. The longer you play, you get older and wiser and smarter and start realizing that it's not very constructive to have anything but an exemplary attitude.

Tiger Woods is the best golfer in the world because he's got the best brain. He hits the ball well, but there's plenty of guys that hit the ball well. But he's got the best head. He's probably got the second best head in history next to Jack, and it might turn out that Tiger's might be more impressive than Jack's. Nicklaus' was obviously the best because his brain was the best, no doubt.

You just slowly come across the realization that you'd better be smarter about it, I guess. I don't know.

RAND JERRIS: Congratulations on your victory today and enjoy your year as U.S. Open champion.

End of FastScripts.


Phil Mickelson

U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP

June 18, 2006
Final Round


= Click for MP3 Audio

An interview with:

PHIL MICKELSON

Q. Talk about the disappointment that you must be feeling.

PHIL MICKELSON: Well, I still am in shock that I did that. I just can't believe that I did that. I am such an idiot. I just couldn't hit a fairway all day. I just couldn't hit a fairway all day.

I tried to go to my bread and butter shot, a baby carve slice on 18 and just get it in the fairway, and I missed it left. It was still okay, wasn't too bad. I just can't believe I couldn't par the last hole. It really stings.

As a kid I dreamt of winning this tournament. I came out here and worked hard all four days, haven't made a bogey all week and then bogeyed the last hole. Even a bogey would have gotten me into a playoff. I just can't believe I did that.

Q. How is it different with this loss than the last two times when you finished second at the Open considering the success and the work you've made and the confidence and maturity in your game or have you had time to think about it?

PHIL MICKELSON: This one hurts more than any tournament because I had it won. I came out here a week or two ago in the evenings, just spending the evenings on the last four holes thinking that I would just need to make four pars, that there's a good chance if I can just make four pars on Sunday, I could do it. I made a good par on 15, bogeyed 16 and doubled 18.

So it hurts because I had it in my grasp and just let it go. As opposed to somebody making a long putt or what have you.

Q. What happened on the second shot? What was your lie like?

PHIL MICKELSON: I had a good lie. I had to hit a big carving slice around the tree and over cut it, just like I over cut the tee shot and some of the other shots. Obviously, in hindsight, if I hit it in the gallery and it doesn't cut, I am fine. I can still make bogey, even par. I ended up hitting the tree.

Q. You were trying to go around the tree, not over it?

PHIL MICKELSON: Around, yeah.

Q. When it didn't clear, what ran through your mind when you didn't do that?

PHIL MICKELSON: Again, I just couldn't believe it.

Q. Was there something that was right in your eye?

PHIL MICKELSON: I was far enough back where I could move it around and get it up on the green, or certainly by it. I had a nice lie and just over cut it, just cut too quick right in the tree.

Q. (Inaudible).

PHIL MICKELSON: 17 was a little bit easier because I didn't have to move it as much. 18, I had to move it quite a bit and just over cut it.

Q. Were you playing for par on that second shot or bogey?

PHIL MICKELSON: Well, I was playing for a par. If I would make par, I'd win the tournament. I just thought, "I can slice this." I had 185 front, 201, I think, to the hole. I thought I'd just put the 3 iron on the green, or if not on it, around it, and get up and down.

Q. (Inaudible).

PHIL MICKELSON: No, I didn't have a 3 wood. I carried only a 4 wood. I felt like if I hit 4 wood and missed the fairway, I'd be too far back to do any good, to be able to chase one down there. I just tried to go to that little bread and butter carve slice, like I used at 13 at Augusta and some other holes, and over cut that, too.

Q. What were your options on the second shot at 18? Was one to hit it into the bleacher?

PHIL MICKELSON: I didn't think that was an option. I had it cutting around the tree, but just too early.

Q. It was hard to stop, I imagine?

PHIL MICKELSON: It was buried. It plugged in the lip on 16, plugged in its divot on 18. I don't know what happened in those bunkers. I've never seen so much sand all week. Where those balls were, I just had very difficult shots.

Q. (Inaudible) what did you see there and what were you trying

PHIL MICKELSON: On 5? Well, I hit that shot better or can get it better out of the rough than a sand wedge, and I couldn't get a sand wedge back to the fairway it was sitting down so much. I kind of figured that might happen, but I didn't really have another shot at it.

Q. The second shot on 18, how close was that to being a perfect shot, maybe a foot or two?

PHIL MICKELSON: No, it wasn't that close. It over cut quite a bit. It had to go through it. Instead it hit a branch and went right back at me.

Q. How do you think you'll bounce back, Phil?

PHIL MICKELSON: Well, I'll head over to the British and try to get ready for that tournament. This one is going to take a little while to get over. This one is pretty disappointing.

Q. When do you go to the British?

PHIL MICKELSON: I'm not sure yet.

Q. (Inaudible).

PHIL MICKELSON: I'm not sure yet.

Q. Do you still believe that your preparation this week and the groundwork that you laid up until about the 16th hole are what put you in great shape?

PHIL MICKELSON: No question, the preparation helped me today. I couldn't get the ball in the fairway and I was still able to make pars, putting it in the right spots and so forth.

Q. You might be calling up Roger Cleveland for another special club?

PHIL MICKELSON: Possibly, we'll see. We'll see what it looks like.

Q. About the Open, you weren't the only one who had trouble coming down the stretch. Colin double bogeyed the last hole, as well. What is it about the Open that creates such anxiety with you guys?

PHIL MICKELSON: Well, it's a hard test of golf. I mean, it's just hard. Fairways are tight, they're brick hard. I hit two good 4 irons right in the middle of the fairway, on 15, on 11. Neither one stayed in the fairway. I mean, they were perfect 4 irons in the middle of the fairway. It's just hard to hit fairways here, and I made it look extremely difficult.

Q. We know that every U.S. Open course pinches the fairways and grows the rough. Do you feel that Winged Foot may be our toughest U.S. Open venue because of the severe contours of the greens?

PHIL MICKELSON: I don't know why it has played out as the toughest venue, but it certainly is the toughest U.S. Open venue we play, and the scores certainly reflect that.

Q. You mentioned that after a major gets over you spend three days in bed. Is that what's on the menu?

PHIL MICKELSON: Oh, yeah.

Q. When you look at missed opportunity, is it more than that because you had a chance to really write a legacy here as a guy that can win majors and go to the next level?

PHIL MICKELSON: I don't know why. All those reasons I'm sure play some part. But I think the biggest reason why this is so disappointing is that this is a tournament that I dreamt of winning as a kid, that I spent hours practicing I mean, countless hours practicing, dreaming of winning this tournament, came out here weeks and months in advance to get ready and had it right there in my hand, man. It was right there and I let it go. I just cannot believe I did that.

Q. What will you do tonight?

PHIL MICKELSON: Nothing special. Get home and leave tomorrow. Get back to San Diego tomorrow.

End of FastScripts.

Before sending me a message for help, please look at the website support section:
Have a Ad/BST question, first look and post here:
BST AD Help
If you have a general help question, post here:
GolfWRX Website Help Desk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 1
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Our picks

    • Tiger Woods - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Tiger Woods - WITB - 2024 US Open
      • 49 replies
    • 2024 US Open - Discussion and Links to Photos
      Please put any questions or comments here
       
       
       
       
      General Albums
       
      2024 US Open - Monday #1
       
       
       
       
      WITB Albums
       
      Tiger Woods - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Edoardo Molinari - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Logan McAllister - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Bryan Kim - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Richard Mansell - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Jackson Buchanan - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Carter Jenkins - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Parker Bell - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Omar Morales - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Neil Shipley - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Casey Jarvis - WITB - 2024 US Open
      Carson Schaake - WITB - 2024 US Open
       
       
       
       
      Pullout Albums
       

      Tiger Woods on the range at Pinehurst on Monday – 2024 U.S. Open
      Newton Motion shaft - 2024 US Open
      Cameron putter covers - 2024 US Open
      New UST Mamiya Linq shaft - 2024 US Open

       

       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
      • 5 replies
    • Titleist GT drivers - 2024 the Memorial Tournament
      Early in hand photos of the new GT2 models t the truck.  As soon as they show up on the range in player's bags we'll get some better from the top photos and hopefully some comparison photos against the last model.
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
        • Haha
      • 284 replies
    • 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge - Discussion and Links to Photos
      Please put any questions or comments here
       
       
       
      General Albums
       
      2024 Charles Schwab Challenge - Monday #1
      2024 Charles Schwab Challenge - Tuesday #1
      2024 Charles Schwab Challenge - Tuesday #2
      2024 Charles Schwab Challenge - Tuesday #3
       
       
       
       
      WITB Albums
       
      Keith Mitchell - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Rafa Campos - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      R Squared - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Martin Laird - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Paul Haley - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Tyler Duncan - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Min Woo Lee - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Austin Smotherman - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Lee Hodges - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Sami Valimaki - WITB - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
       
       
       
       
      Pullout Albums
       
      Eric Cole's newest custom Cameron putter - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      New Super Stroke Marvel comic themed grips - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Ben Taylor's custom Cameron putter - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Tyler Duncan's Axis 1 putter - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Cameron putters - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Chris Kirk's new Callaway Opus wedges - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      ProTC irons - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Dragon Skin 360 grips - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      Cobra prototype putters - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
      SeeMore putters - 2024 Charles Schwab Challenge
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
      • 0 replies
    • 2024 PGA Championship - Discussion and Links to Photos
      Please put  any questions or comments here
       
       
       
       
      General Albums
       
      2024 PGA Championship - Monday #1
       
       
       
       
       
      WITB Albums
       
      Michael Block - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Patrick Reed - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Cam Smith - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Brooks Koepka - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Josh Speight - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Takumi Kanaya - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Kyle Mendoza - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Adrian Meronk - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Jordan Smith - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Jeremy Wells - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Jared Jones - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      John Somers - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Larkin Gross - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Tracy Phillips - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Jon Rahm - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Keita Nakajima - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Kazuma Kobori - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      David Puig - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
      Ryan Van Velzen - WITB - 2024 PGA Championship
       
       
       
       
      Pullout Albums
       
      Ping putter covers - 2024 PGA Championship
      Bettinardi covers - 2024 PGA Championship
      Cameron putter covers - 2024 PGA Championship
      Max Homa - Titleist 2 wood - 2024 PGA Championship
      Scotty Cameron experimental putter shaft by UST - 2024 PGA Championship
       
       
       
      • 13 replies

×
×
  • Create New...