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Phil Mickelson, Riviera

Phil wins in L.A., Tiger's perfect in 2008. Time for a showdown?

A local's knowledge and a cool commute helped Phil Mickelson earn bragging rights at Riviera


Published: February 19, 2008

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Down the hill from the spot where Rita Hayworth once practiced her putting is the final hole at Riviera Country Club, a muscular (475 yards) par-4 that begins with a blind tee shot, climbs toward the salmon-colored clubhouse, bends to the right and finishes at the base of a grassy amphitheater. On Sunday afternoon, as the sun melted behind the towering eucalyptus and ancient sycamore above, LPGA Hall of Famer Amy Alcott stood to the right of the 18th green explaining why, even in the Tiger era, she expects Phil Mickelson to have a big year. She commented on Mickelson's frame (tighter than in years past), his putting stroke (trustworthy) and his imagination (in full flight). "To win on a course like this is like winning at Winged Foot or Augusta," said Alcott, who sneaked onto Riviera as a teenager and now plays the course as a member. "You have to be a real artist. This course has a great feel to it, great character and a great personality. I think this is going to give him a lot of momentum."

Like everyone else, Alcott had just witnessed Lefty put on a performance worthy of the dramatic setting. Thanks to a rock-solid short game, Mickelson made the Northern Trust Open the 33rd victory of his PGA Tour career, holding off Jeff Quinney by two shots to etch his name on a trophy that Jack Nicklaus never won and that Tiger Woods — at least for now — has chosen not to pursue. The win, the No. 2–ranked Mickelson's first of the young season, propels him into the first big event of 2008, this week's Accenture Match Play Championship in Tucson, where 63 of the top 64 players in the world, including Woods, will be in the field. Woods, ranked No. 1, has won his last four starts dating back to the '07 BMW Championship. He is 2 for 2 in '08, winning at Torrey Pines and in Dubai.

Mickelson gave ground to Woods at Torrey, in Mickelson's hometown of San Diego, tying for sixth, but he is now one up on Woods at Riviera, which is just up the road from Woods's childhood home in Cypress. Tiger made his first Tour start at Riviera as a 16-year-old, but after 10 years of leaving

the place empty-handed, he has now skipped the last two playings.

Woods's absence has become a talking point at Riviera, if not an overt cause for concern among a membership that includes the likes of actor Larry David, comedian Billy Crystal and crooner Johnny Mathis. Some say the final straw came in 2006, when he withdrew after getting drenched in a rainstorm — his caddie, Steve Williams, failed to pack an umbrella — and catching a cold. And there's talk that Woods simply doesn't like putting on poa annua greens, which can be bumpy, or playing lengthy rounds. Woods has had the same issues with the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, which he also eliminated from his rota.

Further speculation has centered on the horrendous traffic along Sunset Boulevard between the club and the 405 Freeway, a stretch of three miles that can take an hour to traverse on any given weeknight. Tom Pulchinski, the Northern Trust tournament director, said that a consultant has been hired to study traffic patterns in one of the most exclusive neighborhoods in Los Angeles, but, "The course was built in the 1920s. We can't buy the houses, knock them down and build more roads."