Mickelson and Kim on Ridgewood, from Jason Sobel's espn.com blog:
Q: I know you've said nice things about Ridgewood. Does it fit your eye better than Westchester did?
PHIL MICKELSON: I like Westchester. I think it's a great golf course. I do feel as though Ridgewood is a step up in quality. It's just a wonderful golf course. I've always loved going to Westchester, but this course really is a major championship feel. It's a Tillinghast, same designer as Winged Foot; same designer I believe as Baltusrol, very similar feel, and it has that northeast, major championship field.
Q: Is it more Winged Foot or Baltusrol?
PHIL MICKELSON: It's got glimpses of both. It really has glimpses of both. You can see similarities throughout.
Q: Hopefully it will be more Baltusrol than Winged Foot for you.
PHIL MICKELSON: Well, the 18th hole doglegs right, not left, so that's a nice change.
Uh-oh, does that mean no "bread-and-butter baby slice" for Lefty come Sunday afternoon?
Q: Holes 1, 2, 4 and 6, right off the bat, the best birdie opportunities and a lot of the other holes are tough and greens are left-to-right. Where else on the course besides 1, 2, 4 and 6 are other opportunities for players this week as well?
ANTHONY KIM: Well, if you hit the ball in the fairway, every hole is a birdie hole. Obviously 1, I hit a drive, was it yesterday, I played nine holes yesterday and I hit it five yards right of where I was looking and the wind caught it and hit the tree and I was right behind the tree. So even though it's a driver, chip, if you don't hit the ball in the fairway, it's going to be tough.
They have made the rough so it kind of grows into you, and so I had 170 to carry the rough on I think hole number -- the par 5 on the back, and I didn't get it over from the intermediate rough. The rough is pretty penal out here. You can get lucky, but the greens are perfect, so I don't see where there isn't too many birdie opportunities.