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From My Seat Sports

Phil Mickelson, Fatherhood, and the FESJC

With Tiger Woods now battling midlife demons, no player on the PGA Tour fills a gallery like Phil Mickelson. And the biggest galleries Mickelson sees this month, it turns out, will be right here in Memphis at the FedEx St. Jude Classic. The 46-year-old Hall of Famer will skip next week’s U.S. Open so he can attend his daughter Amanda’s high school graduation. (As class president, Amanda will speak at the ceremony.) With the Open concluding on Father’s Day, as it does every year, Mickelson is sharing some perspective on family and career that goes well beyond fairway-splitting drives or a smooth putting stroke.

Don’t forget, the U.S. Open is Mickelson’s white whale. He’s won each of golf’s other three majors, but has never been crowned this country’s national champion. He’s come tantalizingly close, finishing second on Father’s Day six times (first in 1999, most recently in 2013).

 And Mickelson is 46. The oldest man to win the U.S. Open? Hale Irwin, who did so at age 45 in 1990.

All this is to say: relish Phil Mickelson’s visit to the TPC Southwind course this week. This winner of five majors has become a regular in recent years at the FESJC, and is an eye-popping example of how superstars sell tickets. I’ve walked the Southwind course with groups ahead of Mickelson’s in which you can listen to the conversation between a player and his caddie. I’ve stopped to wait for Mickelson to arrive and it’s like an organized march ensues, younger fans sprinting ahead for a prime viewpoint along the rope or near the next green. Mickelson is a one-man brand in a sport lacking the built-in marketing tool that is a team nickname. He earns every dime he’s paid by sponsors, every check he cashes at the end of a tournament.

Mickelson tied for second at last year’s FESJC, three strokes behind first-time winner Daniel Berger. Here’s hoping he takes the winner’s check home this Sunday. It would be a nice graduation gift for Amanda.

• This week’s tournament marks the 60th consecutive year the PGA has called Memphis home for a week. Among the FESJC’s 10-year anniversaries, which tournament is most memorable? Curtis Strange won the 30th event (then the Danny Thomas Memphis Classic) in 1987. Ten years later, the Shark himself, Greg Norman, took the winner’s check. But I’d have to go with the 1977 event, in which Al Geiberger won by virtue of the first 59 in PGA Tour history. Geiberger didn’t break 70 in any of his other three rounds, but that epic Friday at Colonial Country Club made him a Memphis sports deity.

• This will be the first FESJC since longtime tournament director Phil Cannon died last October. If you’re among the thousands who enjoy the comforts of TPC Southwind this week, remember Phil and the impact he made over his four decades of involvement with the event. A convenient concession stand on the back nine? That’s Phil. A volunteer handing out free lip balm as the mercury rises? That’s Phil. Proximity to the best golfers in the world while feeling right at home? That’s Phil Cannon.

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From My Seat Sports

Q&A with Scott Stallings: FESJC, Winning, and Life on the Tour

Scott Stallings will be an underdog at this week’s FedEx St. Jude Classic. His gallery, let’s just say, would lose a rumble with Phil Mickelson’s. But the 31-year-old pro from Worcester, Massachusetts, is, in many ways, the embodiment of life on the PGA Tour. Traveling from one tournament to the next, aiming to, first, make the cut for weekend play, and then climb the leaderboard where the paychecks get fatter and the headlines larger. Stallings has three Tour wins to his credit (the last at the 2014 Farmers Insurance Open). This will be his sixth straight appearance at the FESJC, where he shot four sub-70 rounds in 2013 and finished in a tie for second behind Harris English. (Stallings missed the cut last year.) The Tennessee Tech alum — Stallings now lives in Knoxville — has earned $594,797 this season and ranks 112th in the FedExCup standings.

You have an interesting origin story for a golfer. You played team sports as a kid, then you saw a light of sorts. Share that story.

When Tiger Woods won the Masters in 1997 [when I was 12], I quit everything else. I stuck just to golf. Golf struck my interest and I decided it was something I wanted to pursue as a career. It appealed to me as something different, and very exciting.

At what point did you realize you might be able to make a living on the PGA Tour?

I still struggle with that sometimes today. When I was a junior in college I was an All-American at a small school that had some success. I decided I wanted to give it a go and see if I could compete at the next level.

What’s a strength of your game these days, and where are you focusing on improvement?

My short game’s been coming around a lot. I’ve been working hard. I’ve always hit the ball pretty well [off the tee], but my short game has let me down in pressure situations. I’ve tried to make it a point of contention every day when I practice, to get to the point where it’s a strength, an asset that keeps me in tournaments. I’d like it to become the most important part of my game, instead of just something that’s there in case I needed it.

How’s the putter?

I’ve been working on [putting] for three or four months. We’re getting to the point of the season where I feel like I play my best, when it gets hot. We’re playing in areas of the country where I feel really comfortable, especially coming up to Memphis, my home state. The hotter the weather, the better I play.

What have you come to enjoy about the FESJC?

Growing up, I played some junior events at TPC Southwind and thought it would be cool to be a part of this as a pro. I watched it in college. The charitable aspect with St. Jude, especially being a father of two now . . . well, you obviously hope your kids never have to be in a facility like that. But it’s nice to know that if it was necessary, they’d have a place to go. The tournament does a heckuva job in supporting [the hospital]. For anyone with kids [on the Tour], it’s a no-brainer to play [in Memphis]. My dad’s from west Tennessee, so I get to play in front of friends and family. I love the area and I love the golf course.

Is there a specific hole at TPC Southwind you find most challenging?

I think the golf course is underrated. If you play well, you’ll be rewarded. If you play badly, it’s gonna show. There are not a lot of tricks to the course. It will show who’s playing the best.

Looking back at your three Tour victories, is there a consistent thread to your performances? Something you’d like to bottle?

Not really, because I’ve won three different ways. I’ve won from behind, won from in front, and won in a playoff. All I want to do is be in position [to win] coming down the stretch to 18.

You’ve taught golf to wounded Army veterans. That must have been especially inspiring.

My father-in-law is a Marine, and my brother-in-law is an Army vet and spent 18 months in Iraq. They were fortunate to not have any major injuries to deal with, but they’ve been around enough guys to see how war can affect people, not just physically, but mentally as well. The game of golf can be an outlet for the guys, provide some comfort to a situation. We wouldn’t be where we are without them. They teach us way more than we teach them.

What’s the most important swing tip you’ve been given?

I don’t know if it’s a swing tip; it’s more of a mentality. The moment you let other people affect how you do things is the moment you’ve lost it. You need to consistently learn every day and pick up tips, but you need to own your game and know how you play. Know what you do when you play well. Don’t try to model your game after certain individuals. You have to play the way you’re most comfortable.

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From My Seat Sports

Frank’s Top 10 Memphis Sports Moments for 2015

This week (and next): the ten most memorable local sporting events I attended this year.

10) FESJC second round (June 12) — I like to walk the Southwind course before the weekend cut, when you can see a wide range of rising (and falling) PGA talent, young unknowns (Harris English in 2013) on their way to fat Sunday paychecks and players with major titles in their rearview, galleries shrinking as birthdays come and go. I followed former Masters champ Mike Weir for a few holes in the morning, his “gallery” small enough for each of us to hear conversations between the player and his caddie. In the afternoon, I set up camp near the third tee and awaited the arrival of the day’s star trio: Graeme McDowell, Retief Goosen, and Phil Mickelson. (Each man has at least one major title to his credit.) I managed to stay with the mass of humanity following this group for two holes. It’s said but not often seen so vividly: stars sell tickets. Phil Mickelson is a star.

9) Tigers 75, Connecticut 72 (February 19) — For the second straight season, the Tigers beat the defending national champions … twice. In the first of two wins over the Huskies, three Tigers — Austin Nichols, Kedren Johnson, and Markel Crawford — each played 38 minutes, combining for 51 points, 11 rebounds, 10 assists, and seven blocks (all of the rejections by Nichols). UConn star Ryan Boatright was held to seven points in 32 minutes and Memphis earned the victory despite being dominated on the glass (41 rebounds for the Huskies against their 27). This was the Kedren Johnson (21 points, six assists) many saw during his days with Vanderbilt. Such sightings, alas, were too few last winter.

8) Kei Nishikori wins Memphis Open (February 15) — Until Nishikori handled South Africa’s Kevin Anderson (6-4, 6-4), no player had won three consecutive championships at the Racquet Club of Memphis. Nishikori earned his eighth ATP title the hard way, dropping the opening set in his three matches prior to the final. The Japanese baseliner became just the fourth player to win three Memphis titles for a career, let alone consecutively. And he’s the first to proudly raise the tournament’s new trophy: a guitar.

7) Oklahoma 84, Tigers 78 (November 17) — Despite hosting this contest, Memphis was supposed to be little more than a welcome mat for the 8th-ranked Sooners. The nationally televised affair was filling a slot on ESPN’s round-the-clock menu, an introduction for Oklahoma’s preseason All-America, Buddy Hield. Instead, the Tigers took punches and landed a few of their own for the entire 40 minutes, taking the lead with just over 90 seconds to play. Hield scored 30 points, but Memphis freshman Dedric Lawson scored 22 and grabbed 15 rebounds (10 on the offensive end) to steal some spotlight. Had a three-pointer here or a few free throws there found the net for the U of M, we would have seen the Tigers’ biggest upset in quite some time. Instead, we got to know a team with far more promise than any doormat.

6) Colts 35, Titans 33 (September 27) — This is as local as the NFL gets. My first trip to Nissan Stadium in Nashville coincided with rookie quarterback Marcus Mariota’s home debut. The 2014 Heisman Trophy winner out-dueled Indianapolis star Andrew Luck (another Pac 12 product) for three quarters, tossing a pair of touchdown passes to give Tennessee a 27-14 lead after 45 minutes of play. Trouble is, NFL games are 60 minutes. Luck threw two touchdown passes midway through the fourth and Frank Gore dashed six yards for what proved to be the game-clincher with 2:51 left on the clock. I enjoyed the game with a friend I’ve known more than 40 years, which made the result all but incidental.

Check back next week for the Top 5.

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From My Seat Sports

On Grass, On Ice, On Clay …

A few random thoughts from one of the year’s best sports weekends:

• Professional athletes are overpaid. (The sun rises in the east, barbecue ribs are best with dry rub … ) But there are a precious few athletes who earn their eight-figure combined salaries and endorsements. Phil Mickelson is one of them.

Last Friday, I spent a couple of hours following the then-unkown Harris English as he extended his lead at the FedEx St. Jude Classic at Southwind. Playing in a trio with Arjun Atwal and Jason Kokrak, English could have been on a first-name basis with those of us in his “gallery” after four holes. Those of us following a player who reached 10-under-par with a birdie on the 15th hole knew each other’s beverage preference before English finished his round.

Then I joined the Mickelson gallery shortly after he teed off at the first hole. There were more than 1,000 golf fans nudging, elbowing, and excusing one another for position to see every shot Lefty took, including one from the pine needles, just beyond the rope on the second hole. (He reached the green through the trees.) Just as rare as a pro athlete earning his keep is the athlete with a visible, tangible case for the value he brings an event. (Honestly, how many fans in the Staples Center can be said to have come just to see Kobe Bryant?) Phil Mickelson brings a crowd. He’s a visored pied piper, making a golf tournament a bit more bankable with every appearance.

• Here’s a somewhat bewildering FESJC factoid for you. No former Memphis champion has won a major golf tournament since Nick Price —who first won here in 1993 — raised the trophy at the 1994 PGA Championship. (Price also won the British Open a month earlier.) With recent FESJC champs both young and talented — Dustin Johnson is 28, English just 23 — you have to figure this drought will end soon.

• For the first time since 1979 (and only the seventh since the National Hockey League first expanded in 1967), we have a meeting of the Original Six in the Stanley Cup finals. There are few spectacles in team sports this side of the English Premier League that offer the cocktail of history, intensity, and rivalry like a postseason matchup of NHL founding members. The Chicago Blackhawks and Boston Bruins playing for the most famous trophy in North America will be heavy drama. Give hockey a chance this week, and you may be hooked for life. (With the Detroit Red Wings moving to the Eastern Conference before next season, five of the Original Six will play in the same conference, making the likelihood of this kind of final series that much more remote.)

• I’ve got a scientific theory on the 35-year absence of a Triple Crown winner in the sport of kings. (Says the sportswriter with an English degree.) As the fastest and strongest race horses are bred one decade after another, might evolution not result in a “supply” of potential Kentucky Derby winners (or Preakness winners, or Belmont winners) so large that the odds of any single horse being superior over three races in five weeks are impossible to meet? Two of this year’s champions — Orb and Oxbow — ran gallant races at Saturday’s Belmont, only to lose to Palace Malice, a horse that skipped the Preakness three weeks ago. (Could be a lesson there on added rest for the longest of the Triple Crown tests.) I remain a huge fan of these three events, but am more convinced than ever that Affirmed (in 1978) won the last Triple Crown we’ll ever see.

• Looking for a valuable ticket stub? Hop on eBay and find one from the fourth-round match between Rafael Nadal and Robin Soderling at the 2009 French Open. With Nadal winning his eighth title in Paris Sunday, that match against Soderling four years ago is the only one the Spaniard has lost in nine years at Roland Garros. Nadal at the French Open has become the equivalent of Secretariat at the 1973 Belmont.