Phil Mickelson Denies Marriage Allegations in Fierce Public Statement
**Phil Mickelson** slammed unfounded rumors about his marriage on July 2, 2026, calling the story a “drive‑by shooting” and insisting his decisions to leave clubs were his alone.
The fire started when journalist **Alan Shipnuck** published a piece in *Skratch Golf* on June 26, 2026. The article alleged that Amy Mickelson forced her husband out of the Madison Club in La Quinta after discovering an alleged affair. Shipnuck quoted unnamed members and a senior club official who claimed a wealth‑management firm told the club to sell Mickelson’s property and end his membership.
A spokesperson for Mickelson issued a statement to *Us Weekly* on Thursday, July 2, 2026. It emphasized that Amy Mickelson is not a public figure and that there was “no legitimate journalistic reason to drag her into it.” The release rejected the claim that she orchestrated any club departures, saying the decisions were made solely by Mickelson. It also called the reliance on anonymous sources “unsupported speculation.”
Mickelson, 56, has built a brand around resilience and honesty on the tour. Accusations of infidelity and forced exits threaten that reputation, especially when they surface amid his recent competitive schedule. The statement’s strong language-labeling Shipnuck’s reporting as a “drive‑by shooting”-signals a zero‑tolerance stance toward gossip that could distract from his game.
* **Ben Boskovich**, editor‑in‑chief of *Skratch Golf*, called the Mickelson team’s response “bizarre” and noted they were given three days to comment before the article went live. He later told the *New York Post* on July 1, 2026, that the outlet “stands by its reporting.”
* A senior member of Madison Club management, speaking on condition of anonymity, suggested the club received a call from the Mickelsons’ wealth manager demanding the sale of the property and termination of membership. The spokesperson for Mickelson disputed that any external pressure existed.
Both sides appear ready for a legal‑style showdown. Mickelson’s camp may pursue a defamation claim if they can prove the allegations lack factual basis. Shipnuck, meanwhile, has a history of publishing controversial pieces about the golfer, which could keep the debate alive in golf media circles.
The golfer is slated to tee off at the **U.S. Open** next month, where he hopes to focus on his swing rather than headlines. Any lingering distraction could influence his performance, especially on a course that rewards mental clarity as much as physical skill.
**Phil Mickelson** remains firm: his personal life stays private, and his decisions on club memberships are his own. The next few weeks will reveal whether the allegations fade or become a lingering footnote in his storied career.