SAN DIEGO – Phil Mickelson hinted at legal action for being accused of “cheating,” saying on Saturday that if the US PGA Tour did not do something about him being “publicly slandered,” then he would let others handle it.
Mickelson didn’t mention Scott McCarron by name in a series of interviews after his third round at the Farmers Insurance Open.
McCarron was quoted in The San Francisco Chronicle on Friday as saying about Mickelson using the Ping-Eye 2 wedges with square grooves, “It’s cheating, and I’m appalled Phil has put it in play.”
The US Golf Association has a new rule this year that irons have V-shaped grooves. However, the Ping-Eye 2 wedges that were made before April 1, 1990 remain approved for play through a Ping lawsuit that was settled 20 years ago and takes precedence over new regulations. (AP)