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Ties to course leads Mickelson to play in late-season event

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Under any other circumstance, Phil
Mickelson would skip a PGA Tour fall series event.

He is, after all, the No. 2 money winner on the tour this year
behind Tiger Woods.

This one, though, brings the former Arizona State star back to
his old home and, more importantly, to the Grayhawk Golf Club, part
of one of the first large, high-end housing developments built in
northern-most Scottsdale.

The area, Mickelson said Wednesday, "has a lot of special
memories for me."

"It's one of the first companies I represented, and I have been
with Grayhawk for 15 years now," he said. "It was a long-term
vision or goal of ours to hold a PGA Tour event. Now that it's
here, it's pretty cool."

The Fry's Electronic Open begins on Thursday on the par-70,
7,125-yard Raptor course, and with so many PGA Tour players living
nearby, the field is the best of the seven tournaments in the
series.

Other notables include Aaron Baddeley, Tom Lehman, John Daly,
David Duval, Justin Leonard, Steve Elkington and Mark Calcavecchia.
Leonard won the Texas Open on Oct. 7 in San Antonio.

The winner of the $5 million, four-day event will get $900,000.
The tournament is sponsored by the Thunderbirds, the same group
that runs the wildly successful FBR Open just down the road at the
TPC Scottsdale.

There won't be the gigantic, partying crowds of the FBR, though.
This is a more intimate setting, and sponsors are expecting 10,000
to 15,000 fans per day.

Like many others in the 132-player field, Mickelson is no
stranger to the course.

"I probably have played 300 or 400 rounds out here over the
years, I'm guessing," he said. "There's a lot of holes that are
going to be birdie holes, short par 4s. No. 7 is a tough hole,
regardless of what par is. But it's still going to be low scores.
We still have a lot of birdies here."

Mickelson said his troublesome wrist is fine and that he's in
good spirits following the U.S. victory in the Presidents Cup. He
plans on breaking in some new irons here.

"I'm also going to Singapore and China to play," he said,
"and it will give me a chance to have some competitive rounds with
those clubs before next year."

George McNeill won last week's Frys.com Open in Las Vegas for
his first PGA Tour victory.

"Obviously my goals have changed," McNeill said. "Before it
was, `I hope I make enough money to keep my card. And now I'm
going, `I hope I make enough money to get in the top 30 to get in
the Masters."

Unlike many of his rivals, McNeill has played the Grayhawk
course just once.

"There is an advantage to guys who have played here a bunch of
times," he said. "They probably feel a little more comfortable,
the guys who live here. Last week was my first time seeing that
golf course, and look what happened. You know, anything can
happen."

Baddeley, an Australian who lives in Scottsdale, won the FBR
Open in February.

"I feel like I'm playing at home," he said. "I've been living
here about eight years. I feel like I'm playing in Melbourne, back
in Australia. All the friends and family are out here. I have about
60 tickets here."