After nearly three decades inside the Official World Golf Ranking top 100, Phil Mickelson now finds himself on the outside looking in.

After not playing in the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill this past week, Mickelson tumbled out of the top 100 for the first time since 1993. He now finds himself ranked 101st after a record 1,425 weeks as part of the list of the world’s best golfers.

50-year-old Phil Mickelson began the year ranked No. 66, but he fell outside after a string of subpar performances. He has played in just 45 events so far, but missed the cut at The American Express and the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and finished tied for 53rd at the Farmers Insurance Open and in another official worldwide start. Mickelson also played once at a PGA Tour Champions event earlier this year, although world-ranking points are not earned in those events and did not affect his fall from the top 100.

Mickelson, a 44-time PGA Tour winner, first entered the Official World Golf Ranking back in 1990, per ESPN. The World Golf Hall of Famer first barged into the rankings at No. 540 after finishing 19th at the 1990 Northern Telecom Tuscon Open and continued his rise from there, entering the top 100 three years later after winning the International tournament.

Phil Mickelson has never reached No. 1 in the rankings but remained No. 2 for a time for 270 weeks behind Tiger Woods. The five-time major champion's last win came back in 2019 at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. He looks to climb back into the top 100 later this week when he competes in The Players Championship in Florida.