Showing posts with label Ernie Els. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ernie Els. Show all posts

5/03/2016

Caddie Chemistry Not a Given


In 2002 Darren Clarke made the final rounds of the Murphy's Irish Open thanks to advice of his stand-in caddie for the day - after his regular caddie Billy Foster had flown back home to Manchester after the birth of his second daughter. Following a call to his friend Paul McGinley, The Dubliner's caddie JP Fitzgerald was the late replacement and his presence proved pivotal at the 18th - according to Clarke.

Speaking at the time Clarke said: "At the last JP said, 'If you lay up and miss the cut by one you'll be as sick as a dog'. 

"So I said right, I'll have a go at it. And I hit a great shot from the top of the hill. I punched in a five-iron. I had 209 to the front. I didn't know what they cut was going to be, par or one under but it was the right decision in the end," explained Clarke 

At the start of the following year Clarke embarked on a series of drastic changes with his golf in order to challenge for the Majors again and switched back to Butch Harmon as his coach, parted company with Foster, after six years together, and signed a deal to play with TaylorMade clubs. The complete overhaul came after a Christmas letter from sports psychologist Bob Rotella and as part of his new look team he added J P. Fitzgerald. 

Despite much promise the partnership did not last and they subsequently split with Clarke accepting that he is one of the more demanding players on tour to work for, and both parted company following the 2004 Masters - despite winning the 2003 WGC-NEC Invitational at Firestone. 

"I know I've been very hard on JP. My demands were too great, I expected him to pick the right club every time, and while I wasn't jumping down his throat non-stop, I was complaining," said Clarke at the time.

Originally from Castleknock, Fitzgerald represented Baltray as an amateur and actually beat Clarke in the semi-final of the Irish Close Championships in 1987. After attending East Tennessee University on scholarship, Fitzgerald was recruited by his close friend Paul McGinley, helping with that infamous putt in the 2002 Ryder Cup at The Belfry. 

The short spell with Clarke was followed by two seasons in the US with Greg Owen and returned to the big time when Ernie Els called him in late 2007. It was Els manager at the time, Andrew “Chubby” Chandler, who summed up the fragility of the caddies role when he explained why Fitzgerald was the ideal replacement for Ricci Roberts 

“JP happens to be in the right place at the right time.” 

“Ernie and Ricci are such close friends that the caddying part of it was putting a strain on their relationship. 

Roberts started back with Els in May of 2001 - after a split in the latter part of 1998 – with two U.S. Open victories in 1994 and 1996 to their credit. In the period of Roberts absence there were only a couple of PGA wins for the South African and it fell well short of what was achieved on Ricci’s return when Ernie won The Doral, The 2002 Open Championship, and The Sun City post season event. In that time the pair also added the World Match Play Championship at Wentworth. 

Ironically, Ricci Roberts joined Darren Clarke in April 2011 playing their first event at the Trophee Hassan II in Morocco with Clarke’s manager Chandler no doubt playing a role in the decision. 

In the same week almost much ink and paper met on the why’s and wherefores of what went wrong with Rory McIlroy at the tenth tee box on the Sunday of The Masters at Augusta National. The last moment the young McIlroy was to lead the 2011 tournament. After which much of the focus started to move in the Fitzgerald direction. 

In the musical chairs environment that exists in the caddyshack, those cannot have been good days for the Dubliner - as no one was short of helpful analysis. In some cases drawing comparisons with other such golfing collapses by Greg Norman or Jean van de Velde. As well as Sergio Garcia 

Maeks one recall some of those memorable Masters stories.

Like when Bruce Edwards recalled the walk up the 18th fairway in 1996 at Augusta with Greg Norman's bag, who turned to him and said 'I guess it's better to be lucky than good.' A remark that left Edwards stunned given Faldo had outplayed the Australian all day. Edwards reply was tough as he turned to Norman and said, 'I just want to caddie for someone who has heart.' 

For McIlroy it was a touch of the same when Schwartzel chipped in at the first and then eagled a blind shot so dramatically at the 3rd. It was clear from those early moments that destiny was marking the South African's card and in all the post analysis the role of fortune and luck got no mention. The reality is no major has been won without it. 

Nor any other sporting event for that matter. 

At Sandwich for the 2011 Open it was the turn of John Mulrooney to be in the right place at the right time and Clarke was generous in the praise of his caddie when collecting the Claret Jug on the eighteenth green. One hoped that it was the start of a longer terms thing. But it was not to be that enuring.

One of more enduring partnerships is Phil Mickelson and Jim “Bones” McKay. Which undoubtedly has been tested to its limit with all challenges in Phil's private life, given his wife, Amy’s, battle with cancer. Compounded by a similar fate befalling his Mother, along with Phil’s own health worries of sporadic arthritis.

Those events notwithstanding Mickelson won his third green jacket in 2010 with a tournament winning shot on the 15th which commentators suggested his caddie should have advised him against. These days it makes for uplifting footage that confirms that destiny was with Lefty that day and the gap between those pine trees was never an issue. 

In the most high profile team of Tiger Woods and Steve Williams the toughest of personal challenges beset the player. With indiscreet remarks by the New Zealander also problematic at times for his employer. Although others were fired for less Williams offered some key components on the course to the former world number 1 and was richly rewarded for his efforts. So much so  he  commuted almost weekly across the Pacific Ocean as he tried to maintain his own personal life intact as well as caddying. 

Having been fired by Norman in 1989 Williams admitted he had got too close personally to Norman, although both remain good friends to this day. To the point that Norman later admitted he had made a mistake furing the Kiwi and tried to rehire him. The fall out last year between the Woods and Williams team showed that nothing lasts forever.

On the other hand the stories of swift caddie changes that have led to dramatic results also abound. 

The addition of Phil “Wobbly” Morbey to the side of Ross Fisher shortly before the 2011 3 Irish Open as a replacement for Andrew Morrow proved immediately successful. Fisher won the €500,000 cheque in Killarney with the caddied that had done the same with Ian Woosnam and Thomas Bjorn previously. 

“I think wobbly has given me that extra bit of added confidence, some self-belief, and like I say, he's great on the bag. He tells me exact little how it is. Doesn't beat about the bush. Tells me exactly where I need to go, what club it is and it's just real positive. So far, the relationship is good and fingers crossed, we can go a very long way,” explained Fisher in July 2010. 

JP Fitzgerald is now part of the more enduring partnerships in golf history. Fast becoming one of the most successful with four major titles to his name.

Good thing Rory ignored all those experts back in 2011


Irish Golf Club Gazette - All rights reserved






5/02/2016

McIlrory Invites McKibbin to Irish Open

Tom McKibbin 
Northern Irish teenager Tom McKibbin has been invited to play alongside Rory McIlroy in the pro-am ahead of the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open on 18 May.

McKibbin, 13, took up golf just before his ninth birthday and won the Junior Honda Classic in Florida earlier this year.

In August 2015 he won the World Junior Championships aged 12. McIlroy won the same event at the age of nine.

"Tom McKibbin is a great talent," said McIlroy, whose foundation is hosting the Irish Open for the second year.

"I played a round with Tom in Florida recently and he is the real deal. At only 13 years of age I think he has a remarkable golfing future ahead of him.

"Having seen him play a couple of times now, he impresses me more each time. And I can think of no better place to showcase his talents than at the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open at the K Club."

McKibbin, who is from Co Antrim, said: "I met Rory while I was in Dubai last October and we got chatting while we were both practising. When I won the Honda Classic in Florida in January, Rory sent me a message and invited me to play golf with him.

"I have to thank Rory for inviting me to play in the pro-am at the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open. Not only do I get a day off school, but I get to play alongside one of the best golfers in the world! It's getting close now and I'm pretty excited. I've been practising as often as possible."


3/24/2016

McIlroy Wins as GMAC and Lowry Lose

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A shake of the hand and a pat on the shoulder from Shane Lowry to Martin Kaymer demonstrated his magnanimity after losing out to the German in the first match of the group stages of the WGC-Dell Matchplay championship at Austin, Texas. But such gestures were delivered with a sense of utter wonderment at how the Claraman had ended up on the losing end of the deal.

For most of the match, Lowry had the upper hand and was one-up with three holes to play only to lose the Par 5 16th and then three-putt for bogey on the 17th to lose back-to-back holes that swung the match in Kaymer’s favour. The one hole defeat has left Lowry with an uphill battle to escape the group stages.

In contrast, Rory McIlroy - who had trailed Denmark’s Thorbjorn Olesen for most of their match - fought back from being two down after 13 holes to win his match on the 18th green. The Northern Irishman birdied the 14th and 15th to get back to all-square and then won the 18th after the Dane missed the green to claim a one hole win.

Graeme McDowell was given a front row seat to two performances in his opening group match: the first was a close-up view of world number two Jason Day, his opponent, continuing his stellar form on the back of his Arnold Palmer Invitational tournament win; the second was an closer view of the Australian’s back injury late-on in their match which cast a cloud on Day’s 3 and 2 opening day win.

Day was required to undergo immediate treatment on his ailing back after suffering what were described as “shooting pains” down his lower back and into both legs, which has put a question mark over his continued participation in the WGC event and also a worry over his participation in the upcoming US Masters.

“He grabbed his back and said, ‘oh, I just tweaked it,” his caddie Colin Swatton said of his player’s injury, adding: “Up until that point, there was nothing.”

In fact, Day - who had opted not to play any practice rounds ahead of the tournament - had demonstrated his status as one of the game’s in-form players with a comprehensive win that also showed resolve. He was two down to the Ulsterman after just four holes, but won the fifth with a birdie and then claimed the eighth and ninth holes to turn one up.

McDowell’s day got worse on the Par 3 11th, where, with 192 yards to the flag, he put his tee shot into the lake and was ultimately forced to concede the hole. Day won the 12th with a birdie four to go three up, but instead of coasting home had to endure a painful finish as he suffered back problems from the 15th fairway where he was seen holding his back and stretching. By the time he reached the green, he was grimacing and in obvious pain.

“I’m not going to say it rubbed salt in my wound when a guy is 3 up with three to go and then he starts hurting and is able to limp up and win the match, but it does put a salty edge in it for me,” McDowell said, before adding, with a laugh: “Go down six holes ago if you're going.”

“But you never wish an injury on a guy,” he said, “especially on a guy on top of his form like Jason is, and as good of an athlete as Jason is.”

Day would move ahead of Jordan Spieth into the world number one spot with a win in Austin but that prospect was reduced by his latest medical setback and there is a question over whether or not he will be able to complete the two remaining matches in the group, with the winner advancing to the last-16. And, with the Masters just two weeks away, his fitness for the season’s first Major is an even greater concern.

As his caddie put it, “He’s been great all year,” Swatton said of Day’s health. “Just out of the blue. I don’t know if it was one swing or what it was.” Subsequently, his agent issued a statement confirming that Day’s post-round treatment had proven beneficial and he aimed to play his second round match.


4/30/2015

McIlroy Proves Smooth Cadillac

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Rory McIlroy enjoyed comfortable victory on the opening day of the WGC-Cadillac Match Play, as a host of big names were grateful not to be making an early exit.

McIlroy saw off Jason Dufner 5 and 4, but defending champion Jason Day, Justin Rose, Ian Poulter, Henrik Stenson, Adam Scott and Graeme McDowell were all beaten at TPC Harding Park in San Francisco.

That would usually mean heading for the airport and a flight home, but the traditional straight knockout format has been replaced by a round-robin phase with the 64 players divided into 16 groups of four.

Former US Open champion Graeme McDowell lost on the 18th to Ireland's Shane Lowry, but Ryder Cup team-mate McIlroy only needed to be an approximate one under par in beating Dufner.

"I felt like tee to green I played pretty well," McIlroy said. "I didn't hole many putts and felt that the green speeds were pretty inconsistent, but did what I needed to do and we move on to tomorrow."

In the all-European Group 10, Sergio Garcia recovered from two down to beat Tommy Fleetwood by two holes, while Jamie Donaldson edged out Austria's Bernd Wiesberger on the 18th.

"He (Fleetwood) played well all day then hit a couple of iffy shots in the last five holes and I was able to take advantage," Garcia said.

Lee Westwood continued his good form after winning in Jakarta on Sunday, beating Matt Every on the 18th, while Danny Willett enjoyed a successful debut in the event with a 3 and 2 win over Ryan Moore.

In the same group, compatriot Andy Sullivan was left to rue several missed chances as he lost 2 and 1 to American Ryder Cup star Patrick Reed.

"I don't feel very hopeful right now but I have a shot, so I guess that's a good thing," Rose said after losing to Australia's Marc Leishman, just three days after winning the Zurich Classic in his first appearance since finishing second in the Masters.

Leishman, who did not play at Augusta National as his wife recovered from a life-threatening illness, won the opening hole with a birdie and was never behind in the match before sealing a 3 and 2 win.

Poulter also lost the opening hole to a birdie from former US Open Champion Webb Simpson, but ultimately paid the price for carding four bogeys in six holes from the third as Simpson gained a measure of revenge for losing to the Englishman in the 'Miracle at Medinah' in 2012.

"I've drawn him in the last two Ryder Cups and what a match player he is," Simpson said. "He is always tough and even being three or four up I knew I couldn't let up and I'm happy to get by for sure."

Stenson thought he had halved his match with John Senden when the Australian birdied the 18th, only to be told extra holes would be played to determine the result, with Senden securing victory with a birdie on the 19th.

Day lost 4 and 3 to American Charley Hoffman, while compatriot Scott beaten 5 and 4 by Italy's Francesco Molinari, the same scoreline by which Charl Schwartzel beat last year's runner-up Victor Dubuisson.

Two-time Masters Tournament champion Bubba Watson enjoyed a comfortable 5 and 4 win over Miguel Angel Jimenez, while Scotland's Stephen Gallacher lost 7 and 6 to former champion Hunter Mahan.

Gallacher's fellow Scot Marc Warren had more success, enjoying a 2 and 1 win over World Number 12 JB Holmes after seeing an early three-hole lead wiped out by the 15th.

"I kept telling myself a player of that calibre is going to come back at you and he did," Warren said. "It was just about whether I could counter him and I was really calm and composed."

Shot of the day had come from American Ben Martin, who fired a hole-in-one on the 17th to take the lead over Matt Kuchar before sealing victory on the last, while Jordan Spieth defeated Finland's Mikko Ilonen 4 and 2.



2/17/2015

Els and Garcia Confirm Irish Open


Irish Open hosted by The Rory Foundation, will srr two more legends of the game – four-time Major-winner Ernie Els and Ryder Cup talisman, Sergio Garcia – become the latest superstars to add their names to what is fast becoming one of the strongest fields in the tournament’s recent history.

This year’s event at Royal County Down will mark Garcia’s first appearance in 15 years at the tournament which launched his professional career as a precocious teenager in 1999, when he captured his first European Tour title at Druids Glen.

Meanwhile Els, who has accumulated 28 Tour titles during the course of a glittering career spanning more than a quarter of a century, will visit the Irish Open for the first time since 1998.

Their long-awaited return will only add to the growing hype surrounding this year’s event at Royal County Down in Northern Ireland, with American Rickie Fowler and former World Number One Lee Westwood having already announced their attendance alongside tournament host and World Number One Rory McIlroy, his compatriots Darren Clarke and Graeme McDowell and defending champion Mikko Ilonen.

McIlroy, whose charitable foundation The Rory Foundation will be the official tournament host this year, has been instrumental in attracting some of the biggest names in world golf to the County Down venue, regarded as one of the greatest links courses in the world.

Garcia, 35, is eagerly anticipating his first appearance on Northern Irish soil as a professional having enjoyed great success in the Republic, where he won the Irish Open as a teenager before playing a prominent role in The Ryder Cup at the K Club in County Kildare seven years later.

“I cannot wait to return to a tournament which has such great memories for me,” said the Spaniard, who won four points as part of the victorious European team at The K Club.

“You could say this event is where it all began for me. I was just 19 when I won in Druids Glen in 1999, only two months after I turned professional.

“Not only am I returning to a very special event, but to a venue of which I have heard some incredible things. Royal County Down is a world-famous links and going by what Rory has been telling me, it could possibly be the best course I play this year.

“I feel like I have a great connection with the Irish golf fans, not only from my victory back in 1999 but also from The 2006 Ryder Cup at The K Club. They are knowledgeable and respectful and also good fun so it is going to be a great week.”

Els, meanwhile, is relishing the opportunity to claim a second career title in Ireland, having won the WGC - American Express Championship at Mount Juliet Country Club in 2004. 

He said: “I haven’t played in the Irish Open for a while and I spoke with Rory in Dubai recently about the event and am very happy for him that he is involved in hosting such a prestigious event. It is a similar role I have taken with the South African Open and it is a great honour to be able to host your national open.

“I was at Royal County Down with my dad and a friend in 1998 and remember the course well. It has such great history and is probably in my top five links courses in the world.

“I am excited to play and I think the decision to host such a prestigious national open on such a great course is the correct one. Hopefully the weather will behave and we will have a great championship, I can’t wait.”

McIlroy, meanwhile, has been blown away by the response he is receiving from his friends in the golf world and is hopeful that more stars will follow suit in the coming months.

“When I took on the hosting of this event on behalf of my charitable foundation, I was confident I could convince a lot of great players to come and play the Irish Open this year but the response so far has exceeded all of my expectations,” said the four-time Major winner.

“To have Rickie, Sergio, Ernie, Lee, Darren and Graeme, as well as Mikko, already committed by February is incredible and I’m really proud to be involved in what is shaping up to be one of the great events of The European Tour season. Hopefully we’ll have a few more big names to add to that list in the next 100 days.”

More than 80,000 spectators are expected and tens of thousands of tickets have already been sold for the event, which is supported by Tourism Northern Ireland.


1/09/2015

Maybin Makes Glendower Cut

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Peter Lawrie carded a second round 76 at the South African Open Championship hosted by the City of Ehurhuleni ending the first two days golf on the wrong side of the cut.

Gareth Maybin fared better at Glendower Golf Club after rounds of 71 and 73 left the Ballyclare man level par - and three strokes inside the projected cut-line. Now guaranteed a weekend pay cheque in his first outing of the new season

Andy Sullivan remained on course for a maiden European Tour title at the halfway stage of The South African Open Championship hosted by the City of Ekurhuleni, but a local Major Champion is among his nearest challengers.

Sullivan added a 70 to his opening 66 at Glendower Golf Club to reach eight under par, one shot ahead of former Masters Tournament winner Charl Schwartzel.

However, four-time Major winner Ernie Els surprisingly dropped off the pace with second round 77.

Tournament host Els, who has won the event five times, was just one shot behind Sullivan after an opening 67 but dropped down the leaderboard with a round which featured back-to-back triple bogeys around the turn.

Schwartzel, who has yet to win his national Open, finished birdie, eagle, birdie to record a 69 while Sullivan - who won a trip into space for a hole-in-one during the KLM Open last year - carded four birdies and two bogeys in pursuit of his first European Tour title.

The 27 year old former Walker Cup star, who recorded four top-five results on his way to finishing 33rd on The Race to Dubai last season, said: "I thought it was going to be a really good knock on the front nine, but a few little errant drives meant the rough got its payback on me today.

"But anything in red figures (under par) is good so I am really happy with the position I am in. I thought I did well on eight to make birdie after a couple of smelly holes in the middle."

As for his prospects of a first win, Sullivan added: "When I get in these positions I find myself enjoying it more. It's where you want to be, you practise to be in these situations and I am playing with the guys I always wanted to as a kid. It's fantastic.

"It's new territory to be up there after two rounds but hopefully I can take what I usually do in rounds three and four and blow the field away."

Schwartzel was considering pulling out of the event after fracturing a toe by walking into a piece of furniture, but he recovered from bogeys on his first two holes and insisted he was relishing the tough challenge posed by Glendower's thick rough and narrow fairways.

"Any national Open should be the most difficult tournament and this week really is a good challenge," the 2011 Masters champion said. 

"The only reason I have not pulled out is that I can actually hit the ball without pain. For some reason I can turn onto the foot but the walking is a challenge.

"I was struggling for a whole bunch of last year but started working with my dad again to recreate the feelings I had and get the old basics back. It's starting to get more comfortable and I'm at least hitting shots that I'm seeing.

"I got off to a really iffy start this morning, missed a few short putts and the conditions got difficult, but I just figured if I could somehow get to level par and try again tomorrow, and I was pretty much on track until a nice finish at the end."

Els had made a good start to his second round with a birdie on the second, but he bogeyed the next two holes. After a birdie on the sixth, the 45 year old dropped another shot on the eighth and then found water with his second shot to the ninth to run up a triple-bogey seven and reach the turn in 40.

It went from bad to worse for Els when he also took seven on the tenth, where he failed to escape a fairway bunker at the first attempt and then three-putted from long range. That left him two over par and battling to avoid a first ever missed cut in the event, but birdies at the 13th and 14th ensured he would be around for the weekend.

Compatriots Colin Nel and JJ Senekal fared considerably better with rounds of 70 and 67 respectively to share third place with Denmark's Lasse Jensen on six under.
 


7/18/2014

McIlroy Opens Route 66

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Rory McIlroy enjoyed another flying start as he carded a flawless 66 to lead by one after the first round of the Open Championship at Royal Liverpool.

The Northern Irishman made full use of benign early conditions at a sun-drenched Hoylake to post a bogey-free six-under-par round that saw him finish the day one ahead of Italy’s Matteo Manassero and two clear of group of seven players that includes world No 1 Adam Scott, Spain’s Sergio Garcia and the Molinari brothers Edoardo and Francesco.

Tiger Woods, champion at Hoylake back in 2006 and making only his second competitive outing since back surgery, showed encouraging signs with a three-under 69 that left him in a tie for ninth.

Although the sun remained a fixture throughout the day, a fresh breeze ensured conditions were markedly trickier for the later starters and it showed in the scoring.

Only Scott, Shane Lowry (68), Boo Weekley (69) and Yoshinobu Tsukada (69) were able to break 70 in the afternoon, while the likes of Bubba Watson (76), Ernie Els (79) and defending champion Phil Mickelson (74), who played together, finished well down the field.

But there were no such problems for McIlroy who produced his second lowest round in tournament, bettered only by his 63 at St Andrews in 2010.

Just as he did at the Scottish Open seven days ago McIlroy now holds the first-round lead, but will be conscious of a worrying trend this year that has seen him fall away badly in a number of second rounds, including at Royal Aberdeen last week when he followed an opening 64 with a 78.

"It's another great start and, yeah, looking forward to getting back out there tomorrow,” he said afterwards. "Whenever I go out and play on Thursdays there're not really many expectations.

"When you go back out on Friday after a good score you know what you can do, so you're going out with some expectations compared to Thursday. I think I've just got to approach it like that, start off trying to hit solid shots the first few holes and play my way into the round, just like I did today."

The 25-year-old produced a sumptuous display of ball-striking throughout as he fired birdies at the second, fifth and sixth to be out in 32 and then added three more coming home on the 10th, 12th and 16th.

By contrast Woods – who missed the cut in his comeback event at Congressional last month – looked distinctly rusty and listless early on as he bogeyed his opening two holes, equalling the amount he made in the first 36 holes of his 2006 triumph.

But a crucial eight-foot putt saved par at the fourth and, after then making birdie at the next, he found grew into the round, coming to life on the back nine with five birdies in six holes between the 11th and 16th, including holing from off the green at 11.

"I knew I could do it. That's why it was so important for me to play at Congressional," he said. "At Congressional I made some terrible mistakes mentally. My decisions weren't very crisp and I wasn't decisive enough. Today was totally different and consequently I shot a better score.

"I'm getting stronger, I'm getting faster, I'm getting more explosive. The ball is starting to travel again and those are all positive things."

The negative thing as far as Woods was concerned was a repeat of the distractions in 2006 from spectators' phones and cameras which led to a ban the following year.

He backed off his second shot to the 18th twice, stopping midway through his downswing the first time, and said: "There were a lot of cameras and we were backing off a lot of shots, it was tough. Unfortunately people don't put the phones on silent and some of the professional guys were getting on the trigger a little early."

Alongside Woods at three-under are fellow Americans Rickie Fowler and Jimmy Walker, Sweden’s Robert Karlsson, Marc Leishman of Australia and a trio of Japanese players; Tsukada, Hideki Matsuyama and Koumei Oda.

Lee Westwood finished the day as the leading English challenger following a one-under round of 71 that mixed four birdies and three bogeys.

Pre-tournament favourite Justin Rose had to settle for a level-par 72 having at one stage got himself to two-under, while neither Ian Poulter or Luke Donald could break par either as they both signed for rounds of 73.

One shot further back alongside Mickelson at two-over were the likes of Graeme McDowell, two-time Open champion Padraig Harrington, Paul Casey, Victor Dubuisson, Brandt Snedeker and Ryo Ishikawa.