Open champion regards his final round of 66 at Muirfield on Sunday as "the round of my life" after the American overcame a five-shot deficit to win the Claret Jug by three strokes.
                                
Open champion: Phil Mickelson 
 
 
The  southpaw's five-under par round was the lowest of the week  and saw him  finish three shots ahead of Sweden's Henrik Stenson, with  English pair  Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood four back.  
"This is such an accomplishment because I never knew if I'd be  able to  develop my game to play links golf," the now five-time major  winner  said after his triumph. 
"I never knew whether I would be equipped, have the shots, have the opportunity to do this."  
The 43-year-old came into contention for the title after he went out in 34, but was pegged back after making bogey at 10. 
However, he then played the best back nine of the week when he  came  back in 32, with birdies at 13, 14, 17 and 18 handing him the   club-house lead and eventually the title. 
 
The victory also moved Mickelson up to second on the world rankings, the highest he has been since September 2010. 
"We had such firm, fast conditions here, the epitome of links  golf, to  putt better than I've ever putted, to shoot the round of my  life feels  amazing," Mickelson - who first moved into the lead with two  holes left  in his round - continued. 
"When I made that putt on the 13th to get back to level par I  thought  that would be a score that was going to contend and have a great   opportunity to win - and I made some great putts coming in.  
"I knew that it was so difficult coming down the stretch that  having to  make birdies to chase somebody down would be extremely  difficult.  
"You have to be resilient in this game, you have to accept losses  and  use it as motivation to work harder and come back strong rather  than  letting it defeat you."  
Butch Harmon, Mickelson's coach, echoed his statements, saying  his  performance around the tricky Muirfield course was as "the best  round  of golf I've seen".  
"I said when Greg Norman won in 1993 that that was the best round  of  golf I've seen, but I think this one tops it," said Harmon, who has   coached four different players to Open victories. 
"Today the wind blew harder than it has and to go around when you knew you had to do it is absolutely brilliant.  
"It took him a long time to understand how to play links golf.  Phil  plays very aggressive, but you can't do that with links golf. He  just  embraced how to play on links." 
 
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