Mickelson struggles at Augusta

Phil Mickelson
12 April 2012

Three bogeys in four holes dealt a severe blow to Phil Mickelson's hopes of a fourth Masters title at Augusta.

Already five behind Rory McIlroy and Alvaro Quiros after an opening two under par 70, the defending champion drew closer by two-putting the long second for birdie. But Mickelson then missed the green at the third, fifth and sixth and failed to get up and down all three times.

He was back down to level par, joint 31st and eight adrift of new leader KJ Choi on a morning that saw two Koreans take it in turns to set the pace.

First 2009 US PGA winner YE Yang, Asia's only major champion so far, reached eight under, but as he bogeyed the ninth and 10th Choi - third in 2004 and fourth last April - birdied the second, fourth and short sixth.

He was eight under as a result and one in front of 21-year-old McIlroy, who like Tiger Woods on one under had yet to tee off again, and two in front of Yang, American Ricky Barnes and also big-hitting Spaniard Quiros, who after his opening 65 resumed with a bogey five and followed with four pars in a row.

Luke Donald, three over after 10 holes of his first round, made it all the way to three under when he followed a birdie-eagle-birdie burst yesterday with three more birdies in the first five. But the World Match Play winner, carrying the curse of victory in the Wednesday par-three competition, then bogeyed the seventh and ninth.

Ian Poulter, who in contrast to Donald dropped four shots in the last four to begin with a 74, set off again with a hat-trick of birdies - the first of them courtesy of a 40-foot putt - but bogeyed the fifth, eighth and 10th to return to two over.

Paul Casey's two-putt birdie at the 575-yard second took him to three under, but he bogeyed the fourth and seventh before getting one of them back at the uphill 570-yard eighth, where he was over the green in two almost unbelievably.

Fellow Englishman Ross Fisher, who produced a 69 in the opening group of the championship, moved joint sixth with a birdie at the third.

Former winner Sandy Lyle had an amazing start when he followed a double bogey six at the first with the first eagle of the week on the next. But a bogey at the third put 1988 winner Lyle two over, while 1991 champion Ian Woosnam was heading for a ninth missed cut in 10 years at 10 over with two to go.

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