Biographies of famous men and women
 
 
 
Home Quotes Philosophies Proverbs Frases en Español Spanish Grammar Photos Games Shopping Classic Books
Biographies by Category
Art
Athletes
Entertainers
Literature
Musicians
Political and Military Leaders
Religious Leaders
Scientists
 
 
Biographies - Complete List
 
Biographies - Full Length Books
 
Photo Galleries
 
Daily Trivia & Humor
 
Learn Spanish Resources
 
Quotable Store
 
Sister Sites
 
Google
 
Web Quotableonline.com
Frasescelebres.org Greatbookscollection.org
Biographies by Author
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 
 
Biography of Phil Mickelson - Golfer
 

Biography

 
 
Contents
 
Online texts
 
Phil Mickelson quote

Phil Mickelson
 
Phil Mickelson frase

Phil Mickelson
 
 
P
Philip Alfred "Phil" Mickelson  (born June 16,
1970) (nicknamed "Lefty" for having a left-handed
swing, despite being right-handed), is an United
States|American professional golfer. He is one of
the leading players of his generation, having won
two major championships and a total of
twenty-seven events on the PGA Tour.

==Career summary==
Born in San Diego, California and raised in
Arizona (graduating from Arizona State
University|ASU), Mickelson began playing golf at a
very young age. In 1990, Mickelson became the
first left-hander to win the U.S. Amateur
Championship|U.S. Amateur title.  By 1991, he had
won his first PGA Tour tournament at the Northern
Telecom Open as an amateur, becoming the first to
do so since Scott Verplank at the 1985 Western
Open.

Mickelson continued to win many PGA Tour
tournaments, winning at the EDS Byron Nelson
Championship|Byron Nelson Golf Classic and the
WGC-NEC Invitational|World Series of Golf in 1996,
the AT&T Pro-Am|AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am
in 1998, the Colonial National Invitation|Colonial
in 2000 and the Greater Hartford Open in 2001 and
again in 2002.  However, despite his victories (21
as of 2004), he had yet to win a majors|major
championship until his victory at The Masters in
'04.  Before the victory, he was considered to be
the best golfer in the world who had not won a
major, often having been accused of "choke
(sports)|choking" in such events.

His Masters win made him only the third golfer
with a left-handed swing to win a major, the
others being New Zealander Sir Bob Charles who won
the The Open Championship|British Open in 1963 and
Canada|Canadian Mike Weir who won The Masters in
2003. (Like Mickelson, Weir is a right-hander who
plays left-handed.) Mickelson is also one of only
5 golfers (Al Geiberger, Chip Beck, David Duval,
Annika Sörenstam) to have ever shot 59 in
competition, and is the only left-hander among
them.  His 59 came at the PGA Grand Slam of Golf
at Poipu Bay Golf Course on November 24, 2004. 
However, it does not count in the record books
because the Grand Slam of Golf does not count as
an official event, so there are only 4 golfers to
record "official" 59s. In a Monday final round,
Mickelson captured his second career major
championship with his victory at the 2005 PGA
Championship at Baltusrol.  Mickelson hit a
brilliant chip shot (one of his trademark 'Phil
Phlop' shots) to within two feet of the cup. 
Mickelson made his birdie to finish at a
4-under-par total of 276, one shot ahead of Steve
Elkington and Thomas Björn.  Mickelson was joined
in celebration by his wife and three children; his
youngest, Evan, excitedly ran around the green,
performing what announcer Jim Nantz described as a
victory lap.

==PGA Tour career summary table==

YearMajorsOther winsPGA TOUR winsEarnings ($)Rank
1991011see noteN/A
1992000171,71490
1993022628,73522
1994011748,31615
1995011655,77728
19960441,697,7992
19970221,225,39011
19980221,837,2466
19990001,722,68114
20000444,746,4572
20010224,403,8332
20020224,311,9712
20030001,623,13738
20041125,784,8233
20051345,609,0243
* Updated September 2 2005. Note:Mickelson won as an amateur in 1991 and therefore did not receive any prize money. Being a very popular golfer as well as a successful one, Mickelson is able to earn far more from endorsements than he does in prize money. In 2004, Forbes estimated his annual income at $20 million. ==Results in major championships== {| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" border="1" style="font-size: 95%; border: #aaa solid 1px; border-collapse: collapse;" |- bgcolor="#eeeeee" ! Tournament !! 1990 !! 1991 !! 1992 !! 1993 !! 1994 !! 1995 !! 1996 !! 1997 !! 1998 !! 1999 |- |The Masters Tournament|The Masters |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|T46 |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|T34 |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|T7 |align="center"|3 |align="center"|CUT |align="center"|T12 |align="center"|T6 |- |U.S. Open (golf)|U.S. Open |align="center"|T29 |align="center"|T55 |align="center"|CUT |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|T47 |align="center"|T4 |align="center"|T94 |align="center"|T43 |align="center"|T10 |align="center"|2 |- |The Open Championship|British Open |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|T73 |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|CUT |align="center"|T40 |align="center"|T40 |align="center"|T24 |align="center"|79 |align="center"|CUT |- |PGA Championship |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|DNP |align="center"|T6 |align="center"|3 |align="center"|CUT |align="center"|T8 |align="center"|T29 |align="center"|T34 |align="center"|T57 |} {| cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" border="1" style="font-size: 95%; border: #aaa solid 1px; border-collapse: collapse;" |- bgcolor="#eeeeee" ! Tournament !! 2000 !! 2001 !! 2002 !! 2003 !! 2004 !! 2005 |- |The Masters Tournament|The Masters |align="center"|T7 |align="center"|3 |align="center"|3 |align="center"|3 |align="center"|1 |align="center"|10 |- |U.S. Open (golf)|U.S. Open |align="center"|T16 |align="center"|T7 |align="center"|2 |align="center"|T55 |align="center"|2 |align="center"|T33 |- |The Open Championship|British Open |align="center"|T11 |align="center"|T30 |align="center"|T66 |align="center"|T59 |align="center"|3 |align="center"|T60 |- |PGA Championship |align="center"|T9 |align="center"|2 |align="center"|T34 |align="center"|T23 |align="center"|T6 |align="center"|1 |} DNP = did not play
CUT = missed the half way cut
"T" indicates a tie for a place. ==PGA Tour wins== *1991 Northern Telecom Open *1993 Buick Invitational|Buick Invitational of California, The INTERNATIONAL|The International *1994 Mercedes Championships *1995 Northern Telecom Open *1996 Nortel Open, Phoenix Open, EDS Byron Nelson Championship|GTE Byron Nelson Golf Classic, WGC-NEC Invitational|NEC World Series of Golf *1997 Bay Hill Invitational, The INTERNATIONAL|Sprint International *1998 Mercedes Championships, AT&T Pro-Am|AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am *2000 Buick Invitational, BellSouth Classic, MasterCard Colonial, THE TOUR Championship|The Tour Championship *2001 Buick Invitational, Canon Greater Hartford Open *2002 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, Canon Greater Hartford Open *2004 Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, The Masters Tournament|The Masters *2005 Phoenix Open|FBR Open, AT&T Pro-Am|AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, BellSouth Classic, PGA Championship Mickelson's major championships are shown in bold. ==Other professional wins== *1993 Tournoi Perrier Paris (Europe, but it's a Challenge Tour not a European Tour event) *2001 Tylenol Par-3 Shootout at Treetops Resort *2004 TELUS Skins Game, PGA Grand Slam of Golf ==See also== *Golfers with most PGA Tour wins ==External links== *http://www.phil-mickelson.com/ Phil Mickelson's official web site *http://www.pgatour.com/players/intro/132075 Profile on the PGA Tour's official site *http://www.golfstarsonline.com/M/Phil_Mickelson/ Phil Mickelson at Golf Stars Online Annotated links to feature articles, interviews, his career records and similar. *http://golf.about.com/od/philmickelson/ Phil Mickelson on About.com Profile and stats
Biography of Phil Mickelson -
Search Now: