Mickelson pulls out of the Masters, which will be without Lefty and Woods for first time since 1994

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Three-time champion Phil Mickelson withdrew from the Masters on Thursday, citing a personal health matter with his family that kept him out of all but one of the five LIV Golf events this year.

Associated Press

“Unfortunately I will not play in the Masters Tournament next week and will be out for an extended period of time as my family continues to navigate a personal health matter,” Mickelsonpostedon social media.

Tiger Woods said Tuesday he was taking an indefinite leaveto seek treatment after his arrest on suspicion of driving under the influence in a Feb. 27 crash in Florida.

It will be the first time neither Woods nor Mickelson will be at the Masters since 1994, when Woods was a senior in high school and Mickelson had broken his leg while skiing earlier that year.

Mickelson called the Masters “definitely the most special week of the year,” and his record reflects that. He won his first major at Augusta National in 2004, the last player to win the Masters by one shot with a birdie putt on the 72nd hole.

He also won in 2006 and in 2010, one of only eight players to win the Masters at least three times.

Mickelson has not shared details of the personal family matter. He sat out LIV's four events to start the year and returned in South Africa two weeks ago, tying for 48th in the 57-man field.

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“It's just fun to be back playing,” he said in South Africa.

The only other time Mickelson missed the Masters was in 2022, when he tooka leave of absence after inflammatory remarks as the Saudi-funded LIV Golf was preparing to launch.

Mickelson accused the PGA Tour of “obnoxious greed” in a Golf Digest interview. In an interview with author Alan Shipnuck for his book on Mickelson, he dismissed Saudi Arabia's human rights record and the killing of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi as a once-in-a-lifetime chance to reshape the PGA Tour.

The remarks cost him corporate sponsorships. Mickelson joined LIV later that year.

The Masters starts April 9 with a 91-man field, with one spot still available if the winner of this week's Texas Open is not already eligible.

AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Mickelson pulls out of the Masters, which will be without Lefty and Woods for first time since 1994

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Three-time champion Phil Mickelson withdrew from the Masters on Thursday, citing a personal health matter with his ...
Final Four 2026: Most Outstanding Player for NCAA tournament, year by year

The 2026 Final Four for the men’s NCAA tournament is set. Illinois faces UConn at 5:09 p.m. ET Saturday, April 4, followed by Michigan against Arizona at 7:49 p.m.

Yahoo Sports

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Come Monday night, there will be a new national champion. The NCAA also will crown a Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four. Here’s a look at who has won the award every year of the tournament since 1939.

Walter Clayton Jr.

Tristen Newton

Adama Sanogo

Ochai Agbaji

Jared Butler

No tournament because of pandemic

Donte DiVincenzo

Joel Berry II

North Carolina

Ryan Arcidiacono

Shabazz Napier

Luke Hancock

Anthony Davis

Kemba Walker

Kyler Singler

Wayne Ellington

North Carolina

Mario Chalmers

Corey Brewer

Joakim Noah

North Carolina

Emeka Okafor

Carmelo Anthony

Shane Battier

Mateen Cleaves

Michigan State

Richard Hamilton

Jeff Sheppard

Miles Simon

Ed O'Bannon

Corliss Williamson

Donald Williams

North Carolina

Bobby Hurley

Christian Laettner

Anderson Hunt

Danny Manning

Keith Smart

Pervis Ellison

Ed Pinckney

Patrick Ewing

Akeem Olajuwon

James Worthy

North Carolina

Isiah Thomas

Darrell Griffith

Magic Johnson

Michigan State

Jack Givens

Kent Benson

Richard Washington

David Thompson

Bill Walton

Bill Walton

Sidney Wicks

Lew Alcindor

Lew Alcindor

Lew Alcindor

Jerry Chambers

Bill Bradley

Walt Hazzard

Jerry Lucas

Jerry Lucas

West Virginia

Elgin Baylor

Wilt Chamberlain

Bill Russell

San Francisco

Clyde Lovellette

Bill Spivey

Irwin Dambrot

George Kaftan

Bob Kurland

Oklahoma A&M

Bob Kurland

Oklahoma A&M

Arnie Ferrin

Ken Sailors

Howie Dallmar

Marvin Huffman

Final Four 2026: Most Outstanding Player for NCAA tournament, year by year

The 2026 Final Four for the men’s NCAA tournament is set. Illinois faces UConn at 5:09 p.m. ET Saturday, April 4, followed by Michigan ...
No. 1s Michigan, Arizona anticipate real tournament test

INDIANAPOLIS -- On the weekend the Fab Five is reunited and Michigan celebrates the anniversary of its only men's basketball national title in 1989, Dusty May can't help but feel momentum moving the Wolverines closer to tipoff in the Final Four.

Field Level Media

The former Indiana University manager for Bob Knight has Michigan (35-3) hitting a peak at the right time with only Arizona (36-2) between the Wolverines and their eighth national championship game appearance.

"It's really cool just to be back here in a full-circle moment," May said Friday, roughly 36 hours before Michigan takes the court at Lucas Oil Stadium.

The Wolverines waltzed through the NCAA Tournament Midwest Region in Chicago, taking the regional final from Tennessee in a landslide, 95-62. Michigan's trail of victims all allowed 90-plus points, 25-plus field goals, 19-plus assists and 10-plus 3-pointers with Big Ten Player of the Year Yaxel Lendeborg (21.0 points per game) leading six Wolverines averaging double figures during the NCAA Tournament.

"He's obviously an elite talent," Lloyd said of Lendeborg. "You put the skill with those physical tools, and looks like to me he's got that alpha dog in him. Dusty has done an incredible job just putting him in positions to utilize all his skills. There's probably not one way to guard him. ... I'm sure that guy, that's going to be a household name in basketball for a long time."

Lloyd said Friday he plans to be a household name in Tucson for a long time. He signed a contract extension through 2031 in the wake of interest from another college basketball powerhouse -- this time North Carolina, last year Villanova -- with a coaching vacancy.

Arizona set a single-season program record with 36 wins. The Wildcats won the Big 12 and, like Big Ten regular-season champ Michigan, haven't had to sweat much in the NCAA Tournament with an average margin of victory of 20.5. This is the first matchup since the NCAA Tournament became a 64-team field in 1985 in which Final Four opponents won four prior games by at least 10 points.

"I feel like we've been tested," Arizona senior point guard Jaden Bradley said. "Big 12 play, Big 12 tournament. I think it's going to go down to the wire. It's definitely going to be a full 40 (minutes)."

Illinois, Arizona and Michigan have been in the top six in offensive efficiency rating all season.

The Wildcats are making their fifth Final Four appearance -- their first since 2001 -- and are back near the site of their 1997 national title celebration at the RCA Dome.

Freshman forward Koa Peat was named West Region Most Outstanding Player, averaging 20.5 points, 5.0 rebounds 2.5 assists in wins over Arkansas and Purdue last week. In a Final Four dominated by transfers and international talent searches, Peat is an anomaly Lloyd applauds.

"Koa is special," Lloyd said. "And I know you guys hear it, but you got to hear it again. Four state championships at the same high school. Didn't go to a prep school. Four gold medals with USA Basketball. No one in FIBA history has ever done that. And helped lead Arizona to a Final Four."

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Classmate Brayden Burries scored 23 points against Arkansas in the Sweet 16, the second-most points scored by an Arizona freshman in an NCAA Tournament game. The pair combined for 1,105 points this season.

The player most responsible for carrying the Arizona flag on the roster is Bradley, who was named Big 12 Player of the Year. He was a third-team All-American and a semifinalist for the Naismith Defensive Player of the Year award.

Bradley's matchup with Michigan's backcourt brings intrigue in a game where most of the Xs and Os are fixed on big men. He'll likely get plenty of time against Michigan point guard Elliot Cadeau, who has three consecutive games with seven-plus assists and overcame an allergic reaction and late departure from Ann Arbor to practice Friday.

But Arizona takes pride in its team defense.

"I think their physicality stands out and the way that they play and they sustain physicality for 40 minutes," Michigan freshman guard Trey McKenney said of Arizona.

The Wildcats are not the typical college offense, a point made by Michigan's 7-foot-4 center Aday Mara this week.

They typically are aiming to shoot a higher volume of free throws, not 3-pointers. The Wildcats have attempted only 53 total 3-pointers in four NCAA Tournament games and shot 43.4%; Arizona made an average of 19.7 free throws per game this season. Michigan made 27 free throws in the Midwest Region final win.

Arizona's defense gave Big 12 foes fits all season with 7-foot-2 Motiejus Krivas roaming between the blocks. But Lloyd views Lendeborg as a unicorn. Not because of just his scoring, but because of his unselfish play.

"It took him a while," May said of Lendeborg reaching his current comfort zone. "And I think our guys have constantly reminded him. He's so unselfish. He's so -- I don't know how to say it. He wants to be one of the guys. They've encouraged him to be more aggressive, to shoot more, to hunt some more individual accolades all year, and he simply refused because he didn't care about any of those things.

"It's allowed us to have a real selfless group, and it's improved our environment because he's been so unselfish but he still has no idea how good he is."

A grad student who had 150 career games under his belt before joining the Wolverines, Lendeborg spent two seasons at Arizona Western College and two at UAB. He's also a unique talent because of range -- 10 3-pointers in the past three games -- and length (7-foot-4 wingspan).

If the Wildcats control the lane and force Michigan to launch from deep, they expect positive results. Opponents are shooting 27.9% from 3-point range against Arizona in the NCAA Tournament.

--Jeff Reynolds, Field Level Media

No. 1s Michigan, Arizona anticipate real tournament test

INDIANAPOLIS -- On the weekend the Fab Five is reunited and Michigan celebrates the anniversary of its only men's basketball nation...

 

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