09/07/08 03:50 BST
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Mickelson sinks the winning putt on 18.

Mickelson's dramatic win

Just as he did in the Masters last year Phil Mickelson birdied the final hole to win the US PGA title at Baltusrol on Monday.

The final 12 players had to come back because of a thunderstorm stoppage late on Sunday and Mickelson was in a battle with Dane Thomas Bjorn and Australian Steve Elkington.

Winner of the trophy 10 years ago, Elkington missed a 10-foot birdie chance on the last, then Bjorn lipped out from 25 feet.

Mickelson knew what he needed to do then. He stood in the middle of the fairway at the par five 18th and before hitting his second shot took a few steps forwards and for good luck tapped the Jack Nicklaus plaque laid to commemorate the Golden Bear's 1980 victory on the course.

Into the wind it needed a wood, and although Mickelson carried the bunker it came to rest in the rough.

But from there he played his next to two feet and punched the air. He still had to hole, but it was easier than the 18-footer at Augusta which ended his long wait for a major and he made no mistake.

While it was joy for the 35-year-old American it was another near miss for Bjorn - and Europe's six-year wait for a major winner is now certain to enter a seventh year.

The Dane was runner-up to Tiger Woods in the 2000 Open at St Andrews and to Ben Curtis at Sandwich two years ago - after leading by three with four to play.

Elkington beat Colin Montgomerie with a 25-foot putt in a play-off 10 years ago, but lost a play-off for the 2002 Open at Muirfield.

Tiger Woods finished joint fourth with Davis Love.

Woods, of course, was powerless to affect the outcome over 72 holes, having posted his two under total before the suspension.

But he hung around in the faint hope that the three players ahead of him overnight - Mickelson, Bjorn and Elkington - might come back to him and that Vijay Singh, Love and Retief Goosen would not go past him.

Every piece of that particular jigsaw did not fall into place for the Masters and Open champion, so he just missed out on becoming the first man in golf history to win three majors in a season twice.

Since he was second in the US Open, a mere two strokes behind shock winner Michael Campbell, it has been a year to remember for the world number one, who began it as number two behind Singh.

He will not allow himself to dwell on "if only" thoughts.

"If I did that then playing golf would drive me into a mental ward," he said. "Every guy who plays golf if they did a 'what if?', especially out here on tour, you'd drive yourself crazy.

"Only thing you can do is take a learning experience from it - positive and negatives - and apply them to the future.

"What did you do right, what did you do wrong. I did a lot of things right this week, but unfortunately I did a few things wrong."

Woods had three penalty drops - one from a ditch at the 18th in round one, one from the lake at the fourth in round two and one from bushes at the sixth in round four - and he had five three putts, as he did at the US Open.

Yet, above all else, this was one remarkable effort. He was 113th after his opening 75, 62nd after a 69 (he had to birdie the last hole to make the cut), 20th after adding a Saturday 66 and then not out of it when it went into an extra day.

The day began with Lee Westwood and Greg Owen holing out on the 18th green - and conducting a Mexican wave.

They were out of it. When Owen missed his 14-foot putt he had to sign for an 80, but at least Westwood made his 10-footer for a 75 and 17th place. Owen slumped to 47th.

Westwood and Owen both suffered bitter disappointment after they started the closing 18 holes only three behind Mickelson and Love.

A shocking Sunday for them saw Owen had a triple bogey, a double bogey and seven bogeys and Westwood eight bogeys. Yes the course was tough, but others coped better than they were able to.

For Owen it had ramifications. He needed a top-five finish to climb into the world's top 50 and qualify for this week's NEC world championship in Akron.

Since that also counts for the European Order of Merit it would have helped him get closer to the 11 tournaments he has to play to remain a member. So far he has appeared in just five.

The 33-year-old from Mansfield, enjoying himself so much in his first season on the American circuit, is now almost certain to resign his membership - and that would means he does not qualify for Ryder Cup points when qualifying starts next month.

And he could not be a wild card next year either unless he rejoins.

Collated final-round scores (USA unless stated, par 70, 12 players unable to finish Sunday):

276 Phil Mickelson 67 65 72 72 (£659,229)

277 Steve Elkington (Aus) 68 70 68 71, Thomas Bjorn (Den) 71 71 63 72 (£322,289 each)

278 Tiger Woods 75 69 66 68, Davis Love 68 68 68 74 (£161,144 each)

279 Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 69 69 72 69, Michael Campbell (Nzl) 73 68 69 69, Retief Goosen (Rsa) 68 70 69 72, Pat Perez 68 71 67 73 (£113,533 each)

280 Ted Purdy 69 75 70 66, David Toms 71 72 69 68, Steve Flesch 70 71 69 70, Dudley Hart 70 73 66 71, Vijay Singh (Fij) 70 67 69 74

281 Charles Howell 70 71 68 72, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 67 70 69 75

282 Tim Clark (Rsa) 71 73 70 68, Zach Johnson 70 70 73 69, Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 67 72 72 71, Joe Ogilvie 74 68 69 71, Bo Van Pelt 70 70 68 74, Lee Westwood (Gbr) 68 68 71 75

283 Paul McGinley (Irl) 72 70 72 69, Sergio Garcia (Spa) 72 70 71 70, Shingo Katayama (Jpn) 71 66 74 72, Tom Pernice 69 73 69 72, Kenny Perry 69 70 70 74

284 Bob Estes 71 72 73 68, Vaughn Taylor 75 69 71 69, Chad Campbell 71 71 70 72, Arron Oberholser 74 68 69 73, Jesper Parnevik (Swe) 68 69 72 75, Stewart Cink 71 72 66 75

285 Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 72 69 73 71, Scott Verplank 71 72 71 71, Jim Furyk 72 71 69 73, Jerry Kelly 70 65 74 76, Jason Bohn 71 68 68 78, Ben Curtis 67 73 67 78

286 Ben Crane 68 76 72 70, Steve Schneiter 72 72 72 70, Adam Scott (Aus) 74 69 72 71, Patrick Sheehan 73 71 71 71, KJ Choi (Kor) 71 70 73 72, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 72 72 69 73, John Rollins 68 71 73 74

287 Henrik Stenson (Swe) 74 67 75 71, Heath Slocum 68 75 73 71, Ryan Palmer 73 70 73 71, Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa) 76 67 72 72, Mike Weir (Can) 72 72 71 72, Yang Yong-eun (Kor) 71 67 76 73, JL Lewis 72 72 70 73, Todd Hamilton 73 70 70 74, Bernhard Langer (Ger) 68 72 72 75, Ian Poulter (Gbr) 69 74 69 75, Fred Funk 69 75 67 76, Greg Owen (Gbr) 68 69 70 80

288 Scott McCarron 72 72 74 70, Sean O'Hair 71 71 76 70, Steve Webster (Gbr) 72 70 75 71, Carlos Franco (Par) 70 70 76 72, Paul Casey (Gbr) 70 74 72 72, Peter Hanson (Swe) 73 71 72 72, Mark Hensby (Aus) 69 70 75 74

289 Ron Philo 71 73 73 72, Luke Donald (Gbr) 69 73 73 74, Chris Riley 72 68 72 77 , Woody Austin 72 71 68 78

290 Mark Calcavecchia 70 69 77 74, Fred Couples 72 72 70 76

291 Joe Durant 73 71 73 74, Stephen Ames (Can) 67 72 74 78

292 John Daly 71 69 78 74, Rory Sabbatini (Rsa) 67 69 76 80

295 Mike Small 74 68 80 73

296 Kevin Sutherland 74 70 75 77

299 Darrell Kestner 72 70 78 79

300 Hal Sutton 69 73 80 78




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