Golf: American great Phil Mickelson reportedly lost $62 million gambling in five years

Phil Mickelson reportedly incurred the losses over a five-year period.
Phil Mickelson reportedly incurred the losses over a five-year period. Photo credit: Getty Images

Phil Mickelson reported gambling losses of more than US$40 million (NZ$62m) from 2010-14, the author of an unauthorised biography on the golfer claims.

Author Alan Shipnuck's upcoming Mickelson book was the source of controversial remarks Mickelson made about Saudi financiers backing a rival golf circuit. Shipnuck released another excerpt adapted from the biography on the Fire Pit Collective website on Friday (NZ time).

Shipnuck wrote that the number was uncovered by auditors during an insider trading investigation that Mickelson was involved in 2016.

"Mickelson's love of gambling is fundamental to understanding his style of play as a golfer. It might also explain the Saudi seduction," Shipnuck wrote.

"Based on his comments to me, he clearly enjoyed the idea of sticking it to the PGA Tour, but the real motivation was plainly the funny money being offered by the Saudis. Why was Phil so eager to cash in, at the risk of alienating so many fans and endorsement partners?

He then connected Mickelson's constant pursuit of money to his gambling issues. The author noted that Mickelson's earning power at that point of his career helped him rake in an estimated US$40 million a year.

Mickelson received backlash for his remarks to Shipnuck admitting that the Saudis were "scary (expletives)" to deal with due to the nation's poor human rights record. He issued a lengthy mea culpa and retreated from the public eye, skipping the Masters.

Since then, Mickelson's representatives announced that the six-time major winner has registered for the PGA Championship (where he would be the defending champ) and US Open, along with applying for a waiver to enter the first event of the LIV Golf Invitational Series. His reps added that he has not made up his mind regarding any schedule plans or events.

Shipnuck discussed the backlash in Friday's update.

"In the wake of the Saudi revelations, Rory McIlroy called Mickelson "naive, selfish, egotistical, ignorant." If he was only those things, I would have had zero interest in spending nearly two years working on a book about the guy," he wrote.

"But Phil can also be generous, thoughtful, caring, empathetic, charming and a heckuva lot of fun. It is the multitudes within Mickelson that make him so fascinating."

Reuters.