ARDMORE, Pa. — We've seen this act before, so many times that Father's Day wouldn't be the same without watching Phil Mickelson find a way to lose the U.S. Open.
Someday he may write a book about it, though it would figure to be a tough sell. Misery and heartbreak usually are, even if Mickelson manages to hide both behind the big grin that never seems to go away.
Just how his latest drama will play out won't be known until sometime in the early evening hours Sunday at Merion Golf Club, the historic course that seems to be begging for a storybook ending to put alongside Ben Hogan's dramatic win in 1950 and the Grand Slam that Bobby Jones put his finishing touches on in 1930.
Hogan came back from a car wreck to win his Open here. That's fitting in a way because, should Mickelson somehow find a way to win in his 23rd Open he will have overcome a ton of wrecks of his own making.
He's had the lead in the Open with three holes left, and lost. He had the lead in another with two holes to go, and lost.
And, of course, he threw one of them away on the last hole when the only thing that seemed left to do was prepare his victory speech.
If careers were measured by blown opportunities, he'd be the leader in the clubhouse. Five times he's finished second in his nation's championship, the one tournament he wants so desperately to win and the one that has tormented him for most of his adult life.
Now he's got a one-shot lead with 18 holes to go for the first time in an Open. And now the fun really begins.