Phil Mickelson files for PGA Tour release to play first LIV Golf event, registers for PGA Championship

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Phil Mickelson, out of the public eye for more than two months in the wake of inflammatory comments about the upstart Saudi-backed golf league, has filed for a release from the PGA Tour to play in the inaugural LIV Golf Invitational event, according to a statement from his longtime agent Steve Loy on Monday. In addition, Mickelson has registered for the PGA Championship and the U.S. Open.

“Phil currently has no concrete plans on when and where he will play,” the statement reads. “Any actions taken are in no way a reflection of a final decision made, but rather to keep all options open.”

The PGA Championship, where Mickelson is the defending champion after becoming the oldest major winner in history last year at Kiawah Island, begins May 19 at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Okla. The first LIV Golf Invitational event takes place at the Centurion Golf Club near London on June 9-11. It will feature a 48-man field and shotgun starts with a 54-hole, no-cut format that guarantees paydays for each participant.

Mickelson has not played on the PGA Tour since January and has remained silent since issuing a statement following writer Alan Shipnuck’s release of highly controversial quotes from the six-time major winner regarding the Saudi-backed LIV Golf Investments on Feb. 17. In those quotes, part of an interview conducted for an upcoming biography, Mickelson called the Saudis “scary motherf—ers” and claimed to have helped draft documents for the upstart league to gain leverage with the PGA Tour. Afterward, Mickelson said he was stepping away from the game “to prioritize the ones I love most and work on being the man I want to be.” As part of that time away, Mickelson did not play in the Masters, where he is a three-time winner, for the first time since 1994.

Mickelson has long been connected to the upstart LIV Golf league and expressed his disdain for the PGA Tour’s “obnoxious greed” in a February interview with Golf Digest. Monday evening marked the deadline for PGA Tour players to apply for a conflicting-event release from the tour, which is necessary to compete in any tournament staged opposite a tour event. The PGA Tour granted releases for players to enter the Saudi International, an Asian Tour event funded by the same Saudi government-owned PIF that’s backing the eight-event International series. But the tour did so with restrictions and emphasized that they did not consider their decision precedent-setting.

This year’s U.S. Open is at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass., and falls the week after the LIV event in England. The U.S. Open is the only major Mickelson, 51, has not won, and he initially needed a special invitational to get into the field at last year’s U.S. Open at Torrey Pines before he won the PGA Championship.

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