The story appears on

Page A15

June 14, 2018

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Sports » Golf

Woods, Mickelson face tall task

WORLD No. 1 Dustin Johnson leads a host of in-form stars out to deny Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson another measure of major magic at the 118th US Open.

Woods, whose pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’s record of 18 major victories has remained stalled at 14 since his 2008 US Open triumph, will put his fused spine and gradually improving game to the test at Shinnecock Hills in the 10th official start of his comeback season.

Five-time major winner Mickelson will try to become just the sixth golfer to complete the career Grand Slam at a tournament where he has settled for second a remarkable, heartbreaking, six times.

Mickelson, who turns 48 on Saturday, would become the oldest US Open champion and the second-oldest major winner in history should he pull off the feat.

“We’re certainly on the back end of our careers,” 42-year-old Woods admitted. “We’ve been going at it for 20-plus years. That’s a long time.”

But Woods and Mickelson remain front and center in the consciousness of golf fans — with Woods’s return from the injury wilderness and Mickelson’s return to form electrifying galleries and fueling television viewership this year.

Three-time major-winner Jordan Spieth believes a career Grand Slam for Mickelson would trump an end to Woods’s major drought. “I think it makes a bigger difference for Phil than Tiger. I think there’s a different meaning to those two.”

But Australian Jason Day disagrees.

“I think the biggest story would probably be Tiger,” Day said. “Not taking anything away from Phil because winning the career Grand Slam is absolutely huge. But for what happened to Tiger, it’s been 10 years, what he did in that period of when he dominated, and I think a lot of people are kind of chomping at the bit for him to come back and do something special — seeing if he can get back to winning and beating Jack’s record.”

Either outcome, however, would be a massive upset.

Johnson, the 2016 US Open champion, arrives at Shinnecock as the world’s top-ranked player courtesy of an emphatic PGA Tour triumph in Memphis last week.

He’ll tee it up today and tomorrow alongside Woods and second-ranked US compatriot Justin Thomas, whose five victories last season included a first major title at the PGA Championship.

Mickelson will play the first two rounds alongside Spieth and four-time major winner Rory McIlroy, a winner on the US PGA Tour this year who will only be spurred by final-round failures at the Masters and the British Open at Wentworth.

England’s Justin Rose, the 2013 US Open champion, signalled he’s set to contend when he romped to a three-shot PGA Tour victory in Fort Worth last month.

Defending champion Brooks Koepka is rounding into form after recovering from a wrist injury.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend