Phil Mickelson to miss US Open due to family commitment
Saturday 3 June 2017 21:23, UK
Phil Mickelson has announced he will not compete in the US Open later this month as the tournament clashes with his daughter's high school graduation.
Mickelson has put family commitments before his pursuit of a career grand slam of major championships, and he has informed the United States Golf Association that he will not be in the field at Erin Hills.
Amanda Mickelson, his eldest daughter, has her graduation ceremony at Pacific Ridge School in California on June 15, the same day as the first round of the US Open.
A report in the New York Times quoted Mickelson as saying: "As I look back on life, this is a moment I'll always cherish and be glad I was present. There's no greater joy as a parent."
Mickelson, who will celebrate his 47th birthday the following day, has endured a number of near-misses in the US Open, finishing runner-up a remarkable six times with four further top-10 finishes.
Trending
- Carra: Man City are in a massive crisis and Pep has no answers for it
- Transfer Centre LIVE! Man Utd open talks to sign Paraguayan teenager Leon
- Pep questioning himself as he disagrees with Gundogan over City problems
- Man Utd latest: 'Rashford asking price revealed'
- Hamilton on Mercedes farewell tour | Fresh images of F1's new-look 2026 car
- Papers: Wilcox steps into Ashworth's Man Utd role ahead of Jan window
- Liverpool latest: Gomez explains how close he was to leaving
- Why exact league place matters in the Champions League table
- £600m: Biggest deal in sports history confirmed as Soto signs with Mets
- Man City latest: Gundogan offers brutal assessment after latest loss
His first close call in the event was at Pinehurst in 1999 when he was pipped to the title by the late Payne Stewart the day before his wife, Amy, gave birth to Amanda.
Mickelson landed his first major at the 2004 Masters and collected two more Green Jackets in 2006 and 2010 in addition to winning the PGA Championship in 2005.
The left-hander produced one of the best performances of his career to win his fifth major at The Open in 2013, but his memorable triumph at Muirfield remains his last victory worldwide.