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Phil Mickelson’s bag: How it compares to past wins at Colonial

Following his improbable PGA Championship triumph, Phil Mickelson is right back in the thick of the action. Twice a champion at Colonial Country Club, Mickelson returns for the Charles Schwab Challenge. The 50-year-old’s current setup has certainly changed from the artillery he chose early in his career. Indeed, the equipment landscape itself is entirely different than it was when Mickelson won his first of now 45 PGA TOUR events (as an amateur) in 1991! Titanium drivers were only beginning to show up on TOUR in Lefty’s early years, and Mickelson’s longtime sponsor, Callaway, didn’t release the Great Big Bertha until 1995. The history of modern golf equipment has literally played out in Mickelson’s bag as a professional. The differences in Mickelson’s current setup compared to 2000, when he won the first of his two Charles Schwab Challenges, are immediately apparent. His Yonex Super A.D.X. driver was a fraction of the size of his 450 cc Callaway Epic Speed Triple Diamond. Mickelson has been leaning on a TaylorMade Original One Mini Driver as his second fairway wood this season – the total amount of technology in his two Yonex fairway woods of 2000, or even his Callaway FT-5 driver and FT Tour 3-wood of 2008, is the difference between the Ford Model T and the Ford GT. Interestingly, Mickelson played Ping Eye 2 wedges throughout his early years and had a 60-degree Eye 2 in the bag for his 2000 win at Colonial. One look at his current PM Grind wedges, and it’s clear the Eye 2 shaping was the original inspiration for the design Mickelson and Callaway engineers continue to refine. Also notable on the similarities front: the 8802-style heel-shafted blade putter Mickelson has preferred throughout most of his career was present in the bag for both victories and will be in Phil’s hands this week as well. In 2000, Mickelson gamed a custom Bettinardi blade. In 2008, it was the same Odyssey “Phil Mickelson” blade shape that he won with at last week’s PGA Championship. Check out Mickelson’s WITBs for his 2000 and 2008 wins at Colonial and what he has in the bag this week. 2000 Driver: Yonex Super A.D.X. (8 degrees) Shaft: Yonex PM Proto 3-wood: Yonex Super A.D.X. (13 degrees) Shaft: Yonex PM Proto Irons: Yonex Super A.D.X. Tour Forged (2-PW) Shafts: Precision Rifle 7.0 Wedges: Yonex PM Forged (56), Ping Eye 2 (60) Shafts: PM 7.0, Eye2 X100 Putter: Bettinardi PM Blade Ball: Titleist Professional 100 2008 Driver: Callaway FT-5 Tour (8.5 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana White Board Proto 73 X 3-wood: Callaway FT Tour (13 degrees) Shaft: Mitsubishi Diamana White Board 73 X Irons: Callaway X Forged (2-4), Callaway X Proto MB (5-PW) Shafts: Project X Rifle 7.0 Satin Wedges: Callaway X Forged (52, 56, 60) Shafts: Project X Rifle 7.0 Satin Putter: Callaway White Hot XG PM Blade Ball: Callaway TOURix 2021 Driver: Callaway Epic Speed Triple Diamond (6 degrees @5.5 , green dot cog) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 6 X (47.9 inches) 2-wood: TaylorMade Original One Mini Driver (11.5 degrees) Shaft: Fujikura Ventus Black 7 X Irons: Callaway X Forged UT (16), Callaway X21 UT Proto (19 degrees @20.5, 25), Callaway Apex MB ‘21 (small groove) (6-PW) Shafts: (16) MCA MMT 105 TX, KBS Tour V 125 S+ Wedges: Callaway PM Grind ’19 “Raw” (52-12@50, 55-12, 60-10) Shafts: KBS Tour V 125 S+ Putter: Odyssey Milled Blade “Phil Mickelson” Grip: SuperStroke Pistol GT Tour Ball: Callaway Chrome Soft X (Triple Track) Grips: Golf Pride MCC

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Holmes shoots 65 to take lead at Waste Management Phoenix OpenHolmes shoots 65 to take lead at Waste Management Phoenix Open

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. – J.B. Holmes roared through the fan-packed closing stretch at TPC Scottsdale on his opening nine Friday, then grabbed the lead on the mellower side of golf’s biggest party. Six months after a final-round collapse at The Open Championship, Holmes took a one-stroke lead into the weekend at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. He shot a 6-under 65, a day after making a hole-in-one in an opening 64. “There’s going to be a lot of people. It’s going to be really loud,” Holmes said. “Just keep doing what I’ve been doing, hopefully, keep making putts and not change the strategy. It’s worked pretty good so far.” In July at Royal Portrush, Holmes had a share of the second-round lead with winner Shane Lowry, then shot 69-87 to tie for 67th. The setback spoiled an otherwise successful season highlighted by an early victory at Riviera Country Club. Related: Leaderboard | Amy paying it forward | Spieth misses cut, continues search for his best The 37-year-old from Kentucky got away from the game during the offseason, playing only two rounds in four months leading into the new year. He shook off the rust at Kapalua and got back in form last week at Torrey Pines with a tie for 16th. Holmes played a five-hole stretch on his first nine in 5 under with birdies on the par-5 13th and 15th and par-3 16th, and an eagle on the short par-4 17th. He made a 16-footer from the back fringe on the stadium 16th, then drove to 6 1/2 to set up the eagle on the 319-yard 17th. “I was just worried about it maybe going too far left,” Holmes said. “But when I hit it, I thought I hit it about right and hopefully it would hit into that bank or bounce just up and it did.” He bogeyed the par-4 18th and took the lead from Wyndham Clark with birdies on the par-4 first and par-5 third. Holmes chipped in for birdie on the par-4 sixth and gave back the stroke on the par-4 ninth after hitting into a greenside bunker. “Hit it really good in the middle of the round,” Holmes said. “Didn’t hit it quite as good toward the end, but putted really well and was able to make some birdies.” Holmes won at TPC Scottsdale in 2006 and 2008 for the first of his five PGA TOUR titles. “That was when I just came out, so I could move it a little bit better,” Holmes said. “I still get it out there, but the golf course has changed more than anything. Like, 12 holes are different.” Clark was second, following a career-best 61 with a 69. He finished with birdies on 17 and 18. “It was kind of a rough start. I was all over the place,” Clark said. “I didn’t feel great with my swing, but then I kind of hit two good shots on eight and nine that led to the back side.” Bill Horschel was third at 11 under after rounds of 63 and 68. He eagled No. 3 for the second straight day. “I’ve just hit really good fairway woods in there,” Horschel said. “Hit a perfect 5-wood in there yesterday and today was a perfect high, cut, soft 3-wood into that green and landed it in the only soft spot I guess there is on that green early in the morning when the greens are rock hard.” Byeong Hun An also was 11 under, holing a 20-foot birdie putt in fading light on 18 for a 66. Scott Piercy was 10 under after a 65. He had a hole-in-one on the 194-yard seventh and eagled 13. “Whenever you make a hole-in-one in Phoenix it’s pretty awesome,” Piercy said. “But I just did it on the wrong side where everybody didn’t see it.” Jon Rahm was 7 under after a 68. After five straight birdies, he bogeyed two of the last three. “Frustrated is a very light way of putting it right now,” Rahm said. “I put a great swing on five birdies, playing great golf, and then just an absolutely terrible finish.” Defending champion Rickie Fowler rebounded from an opening 74 with a 65 to get to 6 under. He eagled the par-5 13th and 15th. “Just put myself in play and was able to just work my way around the golf course,” Fowler said. Fourth-ranked Justin Thomas was 6 under after his second straight 68. Jordan Spieth missed the cut with rounds of 74 and 69. “Historically, I’ve had a really hard time putting, reading these greens and it just continued this week,” Spieth said. “Felt like I put good strokes on it and then I would look up and I missed them by like a foot off line. But overall I’m really happy with the progress I’ve made off the tee. That was the best I’ve driven the ball in a couple years.”

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