Golf

British Open: Phil Mickelson fires record-tying 63

Phil Mickelson came within a lipped-out putt of shooting a record 62 at the British Open Thursday, settling for a record-tying 63 and the first-round lead.

U.S. golfers crowd top of leaderboard at Royal Troon

Phil Mickelson just misses out on record-setting 62 with gut-wrenching lip out

8 years ago
Duration 0:40
Despite the miss, Mickelson became the 26th player in major championship history to shoot a 63

Phil Mickelson pointed his putter toward the hole and was ready to step right into major championship history Thursday in the British Open.

Instead, he endured another dose of heartache.

All because of a 63.

The 16-foot putt looked good until the last turn, catching the right side of the cup. The ball then rode the edge until it sat there on the other side of the hole. Mickelson plopped his hand on his forehead in disbelief. His caddie, Jim "Bones" Mackay, toppled onto his back.

"I want to cry," Mickelson said.

No tears were necessary at Royal Troon, not after a round that was brilliant even by Lefty's standards, and certainly not after building a three-shot lead over Patrick Reed and Martin Kaymer on an ideal day by the Irish Sea.

Mickelson seized the moment with a birdie on the par-5 16th from a bunker short of the green, and a 4-iron to 15 feet for birdie on the par-3 17th to reach 8-under par. Over the last 43 years in the majors, there had been 27 rounds of 63. No one had shot 62.

Mickelson knew that. He also knew he most likely would never get a chance like this after his 6-iron settled 16 feet from the hole on No. 18.

'That stings'

"That putt on 18 was an opportunity to do something historical," he said. "I knew it, and with a foot to go I thought I had done it. I saw that ball rolling right in the centre. I went to go get it. I had that surge of adrenaline that I had just shot 62. And then I had the heartbreak that I didn't and watched that ball lip out.

"Wow, that stings."

What helped ease the pain is that it was only Thursday. He has gone three years since his last victory, the British Open at Muirfield, where his 66 ranks among the great closing rounds in a major. Mickelson still considers it his best round.

He might not have if that 16-foot putt had dropped.

It was reminiscent of his putt that spun all the way around the cup in the Phoenix Open three years ago when he could have shot 59. That didn't hurt as badly as this one because five players have shot 59 on the PGA Tour.

"This one's going to stay with me for a while because of the historical element of the major championships," he said. "The opportunity to shoot 62 and be the first one to do it, I just don't think that's going to come around again. And that's why I walk away so disappointed."

Asked why there had never been a 62 in the major, Mickelson pointed to his putt.

"There's a curse," he said. "Because that ball should have been in."

Of the seven previous players to open with a 63 in a major, only Jack Nicklaus at the 1980 U.S. Open and Raymond Floyd at the 1982 PGA Championship went on to win.

Defending champion Zach Johnson had a chance to shoot 63 if he birdied the last two holes. He went bogey-bogey for a 67.