Mickelson leads American charm offensive in China
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - With the U.S. PGA looking to foster closer ties with China, it was fitting that Phil Mickelson was the first winner of a World Golf Championship event in the country at the HSBC Champions over the weekend.
The 39-year-old American's first trip to Shanghai for the 2007 Champions, which he also won, was a rare venture outside the U.S. for the world number two but in the last three years he has become an enthusiastic and vocal Sinophile.
Mickelson has repeatedly spoken of his hopes for the growth of golf in the world's most populous nation and was at it again after Sunday's one-stroke victory at the $7 million tournament.
"This has been a very special event to have a World Golf Championship here in China, and to be the champion feels great," he said.
"The people here in China have been so nice to me. They have been so nice to my family the previous two years when they were able to travel and I'm very excited to see that people in China are getting excited about golf."
Golf is on the rise in China and the sport's administrators have made no secret they see the country as a valuable new market for the game.
The U.S. PGA commissioner Tim Finchem was also in Shanghai, promising his organisation would "provide anything we can in support (of) the entities in China who wish to grow the game."
"In the early 1990s when we played the World Cup at Mission Hills in Shenzhen, there were 40 some golf courses in China. Today there are over 500," he told a news conference. Continued...



