Phil Mickelson

MegaBlue05

Heisman
Mar 8, 2014
11,082
22,480
66
And at his long time home club!
Don’t get how this happens? Millionaire.. great life.
I think there’s a certain level of success and wealth one can achieve and remain a normal person.

After a certain point of wealth/power these individuals’ arrogance (and the way our society favors the wealthy) makes them believe that rules don’t apply to them and they can behave however they want with little to no repercussions. You see it in Hollywood, athletes, the corporate world, politicians, music, etc. It doesn’t apply to all wealthy folks, but money changes most people.
 

mjj_2K

All-American
Jul 11, 2010
12,520
7,174
113
I think there’s a certain level of success and wealth one can achieve and remain a normal person.

After a certain point of wealth/power these individuals’ arrogance (and the way our society favors the wealthy) makes them believe that rules don’t apply to them and they can behave however they want with little to no repercussions. You see it in Hollywood, athletes, the corporate world, politicians, music, etc. It doesn’t apply to all wealthy folks, but money changes most people.
I also think how early a person succeeds can play into it. Mickelson wasn't quite a Tiger-level phenom, but he wasn't all that far behind, and I'm sure he was a multi-millionaire before he turned 25. I think someone like that has a life experience so far removed from normal that a "rules don't apply" attitude is going to be hard to avoid.
 

Im The Village Idiot

All-Conference
Sep 7, 2025
1,030
3,055
93
I also think how early a person succeeds can play into it. Mickelson wasn't quite a Tiger-level phenom, but he wasn't all that far behind, and I'm sure he was a multi-millionaire before he turned 25. I think someone like that has a life experience so far removed from normal that a "rules don't apply" attitude is going to be hard to avoid.
Idk about that “wasn’t all that far behind” part of your post.

Mickelson never ranked #1 in the world, Tiger spent 682 weeks there.

Also Phil won 6 majors and Tiger won 15.
 

mjj_2K

All-American
Jul 11, 2010
12,520
7,174
113
Idk about that “wasn’t all that far behind” part of your post.

Mickelson never ranked #1 in the world, Tiger spent 682 weeks there.

Also Phil won 6 majors and Tiger won 15.
I'm not talking about career accomplishments, I'm talking about what he was before he hit it big in the PGA. Mickelson won 3 consecutive NCAA titles and auto-qualified himself for a tour card by winning a PGA event as an amateur.
 
Aug 23, 2024
2,564
5,689
113
Video evidence or not, you don't just walk out on the course and permanently boot a world famous golfer for no real reason. Whatever actually happened, I suspect the club had every reason to believe it was serious. And I'm betting it wasn't the first time something like that occurred, so the club decided it would be the last.
I can't be so sure. The club may have just been making sure they cover their own butts over protecting his reputation at this point. I have no idea what the truth actually is at this point but it is still yet to fully play out it sounds like.
 
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Johnnie Africa

All-Conference
Feb 27, 2003
965
3,017
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I think there’s a certain level of success and wealth one can achieve and remain a normal person.

After a certain point of wealth/power these individuals’ arrogance (and the way our society favors the wealthy) makes them believe that rules don’t apply to them and they can behave however they want with little to no repercussions. You see it in Hollywood, athletes, the corporate world, politicians, music, etc. It doesn’t apply to all wealthy folks, but money changes most people.

If you spend time around the general public, as I have to for work, you realize that lots of people, wealthy or poor, are rude and entitled asses. Working with the general public is a burden I wouldn’t wish on anyone.
 
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mjj_2K

All-American
Jul 11, 2010
12,520
7,174
113
I can't be so sure. The club may have just been making sure they cover their own butts over protecting his reputation at this point. I have no idea what the truth actually is at this point but it is still yet to fully play out it sounds like.
I just can't agree. The people at that club know exactly who Phil Mickelson is. They have to know that they are about to make national news. The CYA stance in that situation is to suspend him, or something along those lines. The fact that they went out and told him to GTFO and never come back means it's very unlikely they felt any need to "let it play out", and it would be truly weird if they had no evidence supporting the decision.
 
Aug 23, 2024
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I just can't agree. The people at that club know exactly who Phil Mickelson is. They have to know that they are about to make national news. The CYA stance in that situation is to suspend him, or something along those lines. The fact that they went out and told him to GTFO and never come back means it's very unlikely they felt any need to "let it play out", and it would be truly weird if they had no evidence supporting the decision.
This is just an opinion formed without all the facts at this point.
 
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*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
46,448
84,851
113
Video evidence or not, you don't just walk out on the course and permanently boot a world famous golfer for no real reason. Whatever actually happened, I suspect the club had every reason to believe it was serious. And I'm betting it wasn't the first time something like that occurred, so the club decided it would be the last.
Not one that has practiced and played there for 3 decades as a member. Plus they had a freaking mural and trophy case of his accomplishments in the club.
 

*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
46,448
84,851
113
I think there’s a certain level of success and wealth one can achieve and remain a normal person.

After a certain point of wealth/power these individuals’ arrogance (and the way our society favors the wealthy) makes them believe that rules don’t apply to them and they can behave however they want with little to no repercussions. You see it in Hollywood, athletes, the corporate world, politicians, music, etc. It doesn’t apply to all wealthy folks, but money changes most people.
Sadly in most cases it does. They can afford to defend anything. Threaten people, powerful people come in and get it dropped. Videos get erased, people paid off. Only until they fall out of favor with the elites do they seem to fall or something happens so public they can’t defend it.
 

*Fox2Monk*

Heisman
Jun 10, 2009
46,448
84,851
113
I also think how early a person succeeds can play into it. Mickelson wasn't quite a Tiger-level phenom, but he wasn't all that far behind, and I'm sure he was a multi-millionaire before he turned 25. I think someone like that has a life experience so far removed from normal that a "rules don't apply" attitude is going to be hard to avoid.
Mickelson was about as close as a guaranteed amateur phenom outside of Tiger that anyone has ever been for sure.
 
Aug 23, 2024
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It's formed around the fact that they permanently revoked his membership. The only real fact anyone has.

Your opinion is apparently based on a statement from Mickelson's (totally neutral in your eyes, I guess) lawyer.
You seem to think I am stating an opinion on this but I am not. All I'm saying is I will reserve judgement until more is known. While the fact that they kicked him out certainly looks bad it is not necessarily proof of anything more than an accusation was made at this point. I know they said they had video but I don't know what it actually shows at this time.