Mickelson rallies to win HSBC Champions
Published 4:00 am Monday, November 9, 2009
- Phil Mickelson takes off his cap to greet spectators as he wins the HSBC Champions Sunday in Shanghai. Mickelson finished at 17-under 271.
SHANGHAI Thousands of fans caused a bottleneck at the entrance to the HSBC Champions, all of them eager to see the Sunday showdown at Sheshan International between Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods.
The Shanghai surprise? Woods turned out to be merely a spectator, too.
Mickelson built a six-shot lead over the worlds No. 1 player on the front nine, then rallied to beat another familiar foe, Ernie Els, with two clutch putts for a one-shot victory in the final World Golf Championship of the year.
Mickelson closed with a 3-under 69 and won for the first time playing with Woods in the final group.
Even with Woods out of the picture he shot 72 and wound up five shots behind Mickelson provided his usual dose of entertainment.
Trailing by one shot, Mickelson whiffed on a risky flop shot below the 16th green, only to save par with perhaps his best putt of the year, an 18-foot slider that dropped on its final turn. He followed that with a 10-foot birdie on the 17th, which turned out to be the difference when Els hit into the water on the par-5 18th and made bogey.
We all expected that Tiger and myself would be shooting in the mid-60s and pull away a little bit, Mickelson said. And yet, our group was not making any birdies. It was the groups in front of us. And I was very fortunate to come out on top by a shot. But this feels terrific, because I had to fight very hard throughout the day. Nothing came easy.
That was particularly true for Woods.
He looked out of sorts from the start, missing birdie putts of 4 feet and 10 feet, then taking double bogey on the par-3 fourth when he hit into a canal left of the green where residents on the other side routinely dump their garbage.
Hearing a series of camera shutters in the middle of his swing on No. 7 caused him to hit his tee shot into a plugged lie in the bunker, and it took Woods three shots to cover the final 75 yards and reach the green for another bogey.
Anything that could go wrong went wrong for me today, Woods said. Just one of those days.
Also on Sunday:
Bo Bae Song gets first LPGA title
SHIMA, Japan South Koreas Bo Bae Song won the Mizuno Classic for her first LPGA Tour title, closing with a 4-under 68 for a three-stroke victory over Lorena Ochoa, Brittany Lang and Hee Young Park. The top-ranked Ochoa shot a 64, and Lang and Park had 68s.