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Friday, January 28, 2000     Page:

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) – Phil Mickelson seems to have regained his touch at
the Phoenix Open.
   
A late starter, Mickelson shot an 8-under-par 63 Thursday to tie Tom Lehman
for the first-round lead and leave everybody else at least three strokes
behind.
    It was a 17-shot turnaround for Mickelson at the 7,083-yard TPC of
Scottsdale course. Last year, he finished with an 80 and settled for 61st
place, and the year before he tied for 58th.
   
The 1999 tournament was a preface for a so-so year by Mickelson’s standards
– he failed to win for the first time since 1992, but still finished 14th on
the money list.
   
Hanover Township native Ted Tryba fired a 2-under-par 69 and was six shots
off the lead. “I practiced,” explained Mickelson, who was 11th in the
Williams World Challenge that Lehman won on Jan. 2. “That’s pretty much it. I
hadn’t practiced two days in a row since August, but after the Grayhawk
tourney (Williams), I had a real strong desire to play.”
   
Mickelson, who lives at the Grayhawk Golf Club where the Williams was
played, and Lehman, also a Scottsdale resident, had eight birdies and no
bogeys in their best performances at their hometown tournament.
   
“I have had some decent tournaments, but nothing where I have ever
threatened to win. So this is a good start,” Lehman said.
   
David Duval, Dennis Paulson, Charles Raulerson and Esteban Toledo were
bunched at 66.
   
The group of 15 at 67 included defending champion Rocco Mediate, while 1998
winner Jesper Parnevik was in a group of nine five shots off the pace.
   
Mickelson has won three of his 13 titles in Tucson, but has struggled in
Phoenix at times. Even when he won the event four years ago, consistency
carried him. His best round was a 66.
   
He parred the first three holes before getting birdies on the next three.
Mickelson also birdied the ninth, 11th, 13th, 15th and 17th holes.
   
But he saved the best for last on the final hole. His approach shot landed
on the green, but backspin carried about 15 feet from the fringe and 60 feet
from the pin.
   
Mickelson chipped 10 feet past the hole, but read the break perfectly and
sank the comeback attempt to preserve par.
   
“The longest putt I made all day was that putt to save par,” he said.
   
Lehman has four titles to show for his 14 years on tour, but has been among
the top 25 on the money list since 1993.
   
The $1 million he made at the Williams was the biggest payday of his life,
but it doesn’t count as official money.
   
“It was an awfully good field, and a win is a win,” said Lehman, who said
winning non-tour tournaments was just as fulfilling. “You know, I’ve had
enough success to make myself feel good. I don’t feel like I’m an overrated
player by any means.”
   
He won his last two titles – the British Open and the Tour Championship –
in 1996, when he was the PGA’s Player of the Year after earning a then-record
$1,780,159.
   
The next year, he separated his right shoulder playing with his children
just before his British Open title defense.
   
Lehman had surgery on the shoulder in November 1998, and recovered to
finish second four times last season.
   
His short game was just as accurate as Mickelson’s – leaving him no more
than a 12-foot putt on six of his birdies.
   
Lehman birdied the first, fourth, seventh and eighth holes after a start on
the back nine, then had three consecutive birdies after the turn.
   
He saved par with a 10-foot putt after wedging out of a bunker on the 14th
hole, and finished with a flourish when he rolled in a 30-foot, uphill putt on
the last hole.