JERSEY CITY, N.J. -- Phil Mickelson watched his foursomes partner, Kevin Kisner, sink a 7-foot putt on the 17th green to clinch their Saturday morning match. Scrapping the celebratory dance they'd performed after a win one day earlier, they simply hugged. The man who's never missed a Presidents Cup, who already owned the all-time points record, had just established a new mark for the most victories in the event's still-budding history.

He then walked straight over to his family. His wife, Amy, daughter Sophia and son, Evan, were waiting nearby -- oldest daughter Amanda is away at college -- fully armed with wide smiles at his latest accomplishment.

He put his arms around them and found a willing photographer.

"Can you take a picture of the four of us?" he asked.

The first time Mickelson represented the United States in a team competition, he was 24 years old. He used a persimmon driver that week, teaming with Tom Lehman. Three of his current teammates were still in diapers.

He's now 47, and it's realistic to believe this could be the last time we see the unsinkable left-hander in this type of situation. It's fathomable that the next time the U.S. team tees it up in competition (in 2018), he will be equipped with a walkie-talkie and earpiece, joining other men from the same generation.

This was no time for reminiscence, though.

Mickelson wasn't preserving the moment with a photo because it might be one of his last. He wasn't allowing himself time to consider his career as he basked in the afterglow.

"Not while we're still playing, not while I'm still trying to play in more," he said. "Maybe toward the end I'll look back, and I'll look back at the highlights and the many moments. But right now, I'm just trying to create more."

He continued by explaining that his memories will revolve less around the individual accomplishments than the team successes.

"I think about it more as experiences rather than records," he added. "I have a lot of experiences, and those are the things that I really cherish."

In his dozen appearances at the Presidents Cup -- yes, that's a perfect attendance record -- Mickelson hasn't had many experiences like this week (the first Cup was in 1994).

The United States team has dominated this year in unprecedented fashion, while Mickelson himself has formed one half of the squad's daunting Odd Couple, pairing with Kisner to post a 2-0-1 mark in team matches.

"He's California, I'm redneck South Carolina," Kisner offered in his familiar drawl. "He said, 'You know, we're a little different -- we eat different foods and talk about different things, but I think we're going to really have fun.' ... If y'all had a mic on us, y'all would've had so much content to go over, because we didn't shut up for 53 holes."

It's true. As they huddled together after defeating Jhonattan Vegas and Emiliano Grillo, perma-smiles still attached to their faces, Amy leaned in to Sophia, who had just arrived for today's match.

Phil Mickelson and partner Kevin Kisner celebrated winning a hole in their foursomes match Saturday at the Presidents Cup. The pair combined for a 2-0-1 record in three matches at Liberty National Golf Club. Sam Greenwood/Getty Images

"They've been giggling all week," Amy told her daughter, referring to Phil and Kisner. "Giggles for a week, these two."

It wasn't all fun and games.

Afterward -- and before they each sat out for the afternoon four-ball session -- Kisner still seemed overwhelmed that his debut performance for a national team wasn't simply an unmitigated success but came alongside one of the game's legendary players.

"I couldn't have asked for a cooler partner, man," Kisner said. "He was so much fun to be with. He never gets down and he's so positive out there. That's so much fun to be around. ... I'll always look back and think about who I played with. Nobody can ever take that from me. I played with a Hall of Famer and we did great together. No matter what happens in my future, that will always be something I look at."

Even though Mickelson said this wasn't a time for retrospection, he couldn't help himself.

He looked over at Amy and the kids, now standing near his brother and caddie, Tim, and answered a question about what it meant to have them there with him.

"My kids are at an age where they appreciate these moments now," he explained. "They couldn't understand what it meant when they were little. Now that they're teenagers, for them to share these moments means a lot to me. Plus, when they look at me like I'm cool, it means a lot. You know what I mean. As a dad, when your kids look at you a certain way, it means a lot."

He smiled again at the thought. A few minutes later, he walked back to them and put his arms around them again. He summoned another photographer and asked for another picture to be taken.

In moments like these, he just can't get enough.