Phil Mickelson Won’T Be Using The Ping Eye2 Wedge
Phil Mickelson Won’T Be Using The Ping Eye2 Wedge
Phil Mickelson wonât be using the Ping Eye2 wedge that led a fellow player to accuse him of âcheating,â even though he hopes others will use the controversial club to keep attention on what he calls a ridiculous rule.
âI wonât be playing that wedge. My point has been made,â Mickelson said on Wednesday on the eve of his two-time title defense at Riviera. âBut if these governing bodies cannot get together to fix this loophole, if players stop using this wedgeâwhich would stop the pressure of the issueâthen I will relook at it and put the wedge back in play.â
 The Ping wedge has grooves that no longer conform under a new U.S. Golf Association regulation, adopted by the U.S. PGA Tour. However, any Ping wedge made before April 1, 1990, is approved for play under a legal settlement from two decades ago.
Mickelson is among five players who have used the Ping wedge in competition this year.
Several players believe using the club goes against the spirit of the new grooves regulation, although Scott McCarron fueled the debate when he said of Mickelson and others, âItâs cheating.â
Mickelson hinted at legal action after saying he was âpublicly slandered.â He said McCarron offered him a sincere apology late Tuesday, which he accepted.
âWe all make mistakes, and we all say things we wish we could take back,â Mickelson said. âIâve done it a bunch in my career. And the fact that itâs also not easy to come up and face that person, look them in the eye and apologize ⦠I appreciate him being a big enough man to do that.â
Instead, Mickelson vented his anger at the USGA and its lack of transparency in developing the new rules for grooves. He has complained that heâs submitted wedges that fit the guidelines, only for the USGA to reject the club for violating the intent of the new rule.
âIâm very upset with the way the rule came about, the way one man essentially can approve or not approve a golf club based on his own personal decision, regardless of what the rule says,â Mickelson said. âThis has got to change.â
The next step remains murky.
Tour commissioner Tim Finchem met with players on Tuesday and conceded that tour officials did not realize a Ping wedge from 20 years ago would become such a big issue.
Finchem said the Ping Eye2 wedge produces spin at about 60 percent of the rate from last yearâs wedges, but about 10 percent more than wedges approved for competition this year.
âThe assumption was made last year that very few, if any, players would use that club because theyâre 20 years old,â Finchem said. âI think we underestimated that a little bit.â
He said the tour could either do nothing and monitor how many players used wedges, an option that seemed unlikely because Finchem said it still raised issues over fairness in competition. Some players are going to eBay to find the clubs, as Ping stopped making them and now only can confirm through serial numbers when the wedges were made.
The other option is to work out an agreement with Ping chairman and CEO John Solheim. He said Solheim was to meet with the USGA over the next few weeks, and âI can only hope progress is made in that regard.â
Ping plays the biggest role in any solution because of its lawsuits against the USGA and U.S. PGA Tour over square grooves.
Finchem said the third option involved a complicated process in which the tourâs independent committee on equipment tries to establish a local rule. He called that a âcumbersome process.â
Any solution could be weeks, if not months, away.
In the meantime, Mickelson said he would not use the wedge at the Northern Trust Open, even though heâs hopeful others will.
âIf thereâs no pressure among these organizations to make changes, I will immediately put the club back in play,â Mickelson said.
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