Phil Mickelson’s gambling losses totaled nearly $100 million after golf legend wagered more than $1 BILLION in 30 years, claims former partner Billy Walters

Phil Mickelson has wagered more than $1 billion over the past three decades and racked up nearly $100 million in gambling losses, claims his former gambling partner Billy Walters.

Walters, one of the most successful American sports bettors in history, opened up about his relationship with the golfing legend in his autobiography “Gambler: Secrets from a Life at Risk,” via Golf overview.

Citing betting and two “highly reliable” sources, the Las Vegas businessman claims that Mickelson made 858 $220,000 bets and 1,115 $110,000 bets between 2010 and 2014, while estimating his total losses over the past 30 years exceed $1 billion.

“The only other person I know who topped that kind of book is me,” he said.

Walters also claims that Mickelson, who has won six major championships during a glittering golf career, even attempted to place a $400,000 bet on his own US team to win the 2012 Ryder Cup.

Golf legend Phil Mickelson is said to have wagered more than $1 billion over the past three decades

Mickelson’s former gambling partner Billy Walters (pictured) opened up about his relationship with the six-time major champion in his autobiography

“Phil called me from the Medinah Country Club just outside Chicago, the site of the 39th Ryder Cup games between the United States and Europe,” he recalls.

He was confident that the American team led by Tiger Woods, Bubba Watson and Phil himself was on the verge of winning back the trophy from the European Championship. He was so confident that he asked me to place a $400,000 bet so he could win on the US team.

“I couldn’t believe what I heard.”

Walters, who was sentenced to five years in prison in 2017 for insider trading, says he then angrily asked Mickelson, “Have you lost your mind?” before the California golfer backtracked on his request. He remains unsure whether he placed the bet elsewhere.

That year, Team USA suffered one of the biggest collapses in Ryder Cup history as Europe staged a miraculous comeback in Medinah.

After first crossing paths in 2006 at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am in Northern California, Walters and Mickelson met again two years later at another Pro-Am in Charlotte, where the latter planted the seeds of a potential gaming partnership.

The pair then entered into that partnership, split all profits 50/50 and deposited an equal share of the money to ensure an equal amount of risk and reward over the course of five years.

But Walters added, “Phil said he had two offshore accounts that would require major action from him. In all the decades I’ve worked with partners and beards, Phil had accounts as big as anyone I’d seen.

Walters claims Mickelson, one of the most successful golfers of modern times, has earned nearly $100 million in gambling losses in 30 years

He even claims that the American wanted to bet $ 400,000 on his own American team to win the Ryder Cup in 2012.

Walters says he knocked out Mickelson immediately, but he’s not sure if he placed the bet elsewhere

“You don’t get accounts like that without putting in millions of dollars.”

Walters further revealed that Mickelson made 3,154 bets in 2011 alone, amounting to nine a day.

On one particular day that year, he made 43 bets on major league baseball games, resulting in a loss of $143,500.

The 53-year-old also made a whopping 7,065 bets on football, basketball and baseball.

Mickelson’s struggles with sports betting have been well documented over the years, with court documents from a 2015 money laundering case showing that nearly $3 million was transferred from him to an intermediary of “an illegal gambling operation.”

And six years later, the Detroit News revealed that court documents also linked him to an alleged Mafia bookmaker in a 2007 trial.

While he was not charged in either case, Mickelson’s gambling habits have remained in the public domain throughout his golf career, during which he amassed $97 million in PGA Tour earnings on the course.

He also penned a lucrative multi-year contract with Saudi-funded rebel tour LIV Golf, believed to be worth $200 million.

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