Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting Phil Mickelson ‘has the bit in his teeth’ at PGA Championship

Phil Mickelson ‘has the bit in his teeth’ at PGA Championship

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. – Steve Stricker had a premonition this might happen. It was early in the week, and he and Phil Mickelson were taking on Zach Johnson and Will Zalatoris in a nine-hole match in advance of the 103rd PGA Championship at Kiawah. “Let me just say, Phil did a lot of talking,” Stricker said. “So when Phil does a lot of talking, that means that usually he’s playing well, and him and I beat up on Zach and Will a little bit.” Mickelson is still making plenty of noise halfway through this windswept PGA, which he led after the morning wave after a second-round 69. After starting on the back nine and making the turn at even par, he heated up on his inward nine for the second straight day with a 5-under 31. RELATED: Full leaderboard | Nine Things to Know: Kiawah Island | Once again, 17 provides best theater at Kiawah “I think he has the bit between his teeth,” said Padraig Harrington (73, even par), who played the first 36 holes with Mickelson and Jason Day (75, 5 over). “I think he believes he can do it in these conditions, just like myself. I think myself, Phil would find it easier to compete on this style of golf course in these conditions in a major tournament all the time. “You can be patient in these courses,” he continued, “and obviously you’ve got to make a few birdies, but it suits somebody who is a player, somebody who is thinking.” Mickelson will turn 51 next month, and while he’s dropped to 115th in the world, 168th in the FedExCup, he’s shown some signs of life. He looked like the Phil of old as he shot a first-round 64 to take the lead at the Wells Fargo Championship two weeks ago. But he looked, well, just plain old after that, failing to break 75 as he spiraled down the board into 69th place. Harrington said that he first met Mickelson at the 1991 Walker Cup at Portmarnock Golf Club. Three decades later, Mickelson has won 44 times on the PGA TOUR, including five majors, but with only two wins in the last seven years, he admits his mental game has fallen off. “I’m working on it,” he said. “I’m just making more and more progress just by trying to elongate my focus. I might try to play 36, 45 holes in a day and try to focus on each shot so that when I go out and play 18, it doesn’t feel like it’s that much. I might try to elongate the time that I end up meditating, but I’m trying to use my mind like a muscle and just expand it because as I’ve gotten older, it’s been more difficult for me to maintain a sharp focus, a good visualization and see the shot. “Physically I feel like I’m able to perform and hit the shots that I’ve hit throughout my career,” he added. Occasionally using a 2-wood that he deploys as a fairway finder, Mickelson hit 11 of 14 fairways in the second round. That’s uncannily accurate, for him, and allows him to shine with his irons, the strength of his game. He said he and his caddie/brother Tim have been spot-on with their yardages – Mickelson hit 12 greens in regulation – and was No. 1 in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green as the afternoon wave began. He took a tidy 27 putts for the second straight day. It was his ability to avoid the big miss, though, that stood out. Mickelson, whose best this season is a T21 at the Masters, came into this week 199th in driving accuracy. He admittedly strives to be average in that category, but there’s nothing average about him finding the short grass only 50% of the time. “Yeah, there were no foul balls,” Day said, when asked what he saw from Mickelson the first two days. “Usually with Phil you can get some pretty wide ones, and he kept it straight out in front of him. And his iron play was pretty tight. There was a lot of quality iron shots into the greens.” The only real danger Mickelson got into was as the group was put on the clock for slow play. After he came up just short of the green at the par-3 eighth, microphones picked him up saying he was rushing because he was afraid of getting dinged for a bad time. Alas, he was not, and got up and down for par. After converting from 22 1/2 feet at the ninth for his final birdie of the day, and doing his media hits, he went back out to the practice putting green. He found something in his stroke at the turn, he said, which led to those five late birdies (2, 4, 5, 7, 9). Yes, he’s logged some serious miles on TOUR. Yes, Harrington joked that his caddie, Ronan Flood, asked who Mickelson played in singles in the 1991 Ryder Cup at Kiawah. (Mickelson wasn’t on those teams yet.) But yes, Phil Mickelson has the bit in his teeth. “He’s not here to make the cut,” Harrington said. “He’s not here to finish – even 15th would be a disappointment. You know what? Even second would be a disappointment for Phil.” He will plot his way around a dastardly Pete Dye design. He will confront players half his age. He will take on himself in an epic battle between the Phil of old and just-plain-old Phil. Which one will win the weekend? That we’re all meditating on that is the surprise of the week.

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Joel Dahmen proving he can handle the pressure on TOURJoel Dahmen proving he can handle the pressure on TOUR

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Battling cancer provided perspective. Playing with Tiger Woods proved he can handle pressure. It’s easy to assume that the winless Joel Dahmen will be overcome with anxiety at 2 p.m. Saturday, when he steps onto Quail Hollow’s first tee alongside a major winner. Dahmen disagrees. “I’ve been through life and death,â€� Dahmen said. “This is not it.â€� Dahmen trails Jason Dufner by one stroke at the halfway mark of the Wells Fargo Championship. Rory McIlroy, Patrick Reed Justin Rose and Jason Day are lurking in the top 10, as well. Winning on the PGA TOUR is life-changing. Cancer, all too often, takes lives. Dahmen hasn’t experienced the former. But is all too familiar with the latter. His mother died of cancer when he was a junior in high school. He battled testicular cancer in 2011. Dahmen, 31, is in his third year on the PGA TOUR. He’s been appearing on leaderboards more often as he continues his steady ascent through pro golf. His 66 on Thursday gave him his third first-round lead in his last five individual starts. He shot the same score Friday. Related: Tee times | McIlroy ‘right there’ heading into weekend | Dufner, Homa prove there’s light at the end of the tunnel | Day makes dream come true for young fan | Harsh lessons can pay big dividends on the PGA TOUR Starring on Thursday can only gain a player so much notoriety. Playing with Woods is a different story. That happened at last year’s Quicken Loans National, where Dahmen and his wide-brimmed bucket hat shot 69 to Woods’ 68 in the third round. It was an impressive result considering how he felt on the first tee. “I wasn’t sure I was going to get the ball in the air,â€� he said. Dahmen again showed his steely reserve on the final two holes of this year’s PLAYERS Championship. He’d just birdied 16 and was hanging around the top 10. He still had to face the Stadium Course’s water-lined finishing holes, though. “If you can finish par-par on those two holes under the gun when it doubles my net worth, that’s some pressure,â€� Dahmen said. “It doesn’t get much more than that.â€� He managed to make those two last pars on Pete Dye’s penal design and earned $253,125. Coming from a small town in eastern Washington, surviving cancer and toiling for five years on the Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada has given Dahmen a unique perspective. He admits that he doesn’t practice as much as his peers. He knows that the world’s best play at a different level than him, but he’s not dying to trade places with them, either. He’s content with his lot. He enjoys traveling the TOUR with his wife, Lona, who documents their meals on Instagram. “I love this game. It gives me a great career, a great life,â€� he said. “I don’t really care about trophies, to be honest. I love competing, but I love money too. “I’m a kid from Clarkston, Washington, who’s on the PGA TOUR. … They give you free food inside. You can hit Pro V1s on the range. That just doesn’t happen where I grew up. You dream of that stuff, but to actually be doing it, … I think I’m probably more appreciative than other people.â€� Quail Hollow is playing firm and fast this week, which suits him perfectly. Hitting fairways and greens is his specialty. He’s missed just four fairways and five greens through two rounds.  Dahmen, 31, last won five years ago, on PGA TOUR Canada. That two-win season came after another failed attempt at Q-School that left him despondent. He didn’t pick up a club for a six weeks, and tried to ease the pain by buying a dog. Quitting was never an option, though. “I didn’t have anything else to do,â€� said Dahmen, who turned pro in 2010. “I don’t have a degree. I always knew I was good enough. You have to put a lot of time into this. It doesn’t just happen.â€� His success in Canada earned him Web.com Tour status. He played there for two years before graduating to the PGA TOUR. He finished 176th in the FedExCup as a rookie. He was 80th the next season, following his foray with Woods with four consecutive top-15 finishes, including a runner-up at the John Deere Classic. He’s 65th in the standings this season. “I’m getting better every year,â€� he said. “I’m getting better weekly.â€� And now he has a chance to win on the PGA TOUR for the first time. But he’ll be OK even if he doesn’t.

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After incredible ride, Doug Ghim has ‘difficult conversation’ with dadAfter incredible ride, Doug Ghim has ‘difficult conversation’ with dad

CROMWELL, Conn. – Put yourself in Doug Ghim’s golf shoes. You’re 22 years old and about to turn pro. Your father Jeff – who introduced you to the game, built a hitting bay in the backyard because the family couldn’t afford a club membership, and remains the only swing coach you’ve ever had – also has been your caddie for many of your memorable golfing moments. That includes recent appearances at the Masters and U.S. Open, your only two PGA TOUR starts as an amateur. At Augusta National, you earned low amateur honors – giving you a seat inside Butler Cabin after the final round – and also made three eagles. Two of those were in the opening round, including an unlikely one at the par-4 18th. Jeff, in full sprint while wearing the traditional caddie jumpsuit, ran into your arms to celebrate. You couldn’t hug him enough times that week. You call it “an incredible rideâ€� you’ve enjoyed with your dad. “There is no person that works harder for me,â€� you add. The end result? 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Sure, they’ve had their share of disagreements through the years; Doug told a story to the Golf Channel about a six-month period in which you two locked horns (how apropos that you’d end up attending the University of Texas). Doug blamed himself. “Puberty,â€� he said. On the Sunday before Masters week, Jeff lost the yardage book after practice. Someone was nice enough to find it and give it to lost and found. Jeff retrieved it the next day. Evidently, he had lost it in a restroom. How does that happen? “You kind of have to take your whole jumpsuit off,â€� Doug explained later that week. “It’s a onesie.â€� Having family on the bag may work for the world’s top-ranked player Dustin Johnson, who uses his brother Austin for his caddie. But Ghim’s not yet at that level. So he’s hired veteran Lance Bennett, the former long-time caddie for Matt Kuchar who has more recently caddied for Bill Haas and Daniel Berger. Bennett should be a big help as Ghim manages the early portion of his pro career, which will involve some sponsor’s exemptions until he can gain status. Doug called Bennett “a hot commodity in our industry. I just thought I need to take it.â€� Explained Ghim: “I just wanted to try having a professional caddie. Being out at the Masters and the U.S. Open, I got to see kind of what the caddie aspect was like. It’s kind of like a well-oiled machine, and I just figured that having that experience, not having status and never seeing the golf courses before, it was something that I at least needed to try. “I know that my dad will always be willing to take the call if I ever need him to be on the bag at any point. But Lance is great. He’s seen all these golf courses before. I think he had like an unreal 36 major championship streak for a bit. So he’s seen a lot and been around a lot of the guys.â€� That’s not to say Jeff Ghim won’t be around. He remains his son’s swing coach and is on-site this week at TPC River Highlands. In fact, as Ghim played a practice round Tuesday with Jordan Spieth – they paired up to play Ryan Palmer and Jack Campbell in a friendly match – Bennett was on the bag while Jeff walked with his son. Like any amateur turning pro, Doug Ghim knows he has a lot to learn about life on TOUR. Best ways to practice without wearing yourself out. Getting familiar with the courses. Managing travel. The final say now rests with him. It can be daunting. But it will also be fun. His future is bright. He’s seen what his friend Joaquin Niemann has done since turning pro earlier this year – three top 10s in his first six starts to earn special temporary membership through the rest of the season. Ghim would love similar results. It’s a business now. Even so, there will be times when Doug Ghim will miss having his dad inside the ropes. 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