National Post

Spain toasts Garcia’s golf triumph

- Joseph Wilson

• Drawing strength from Spain’s greatest golfers, Sergio Garcia finally won a major.

The winning putt swirled into the cup on the first playoff hole, giving “El Nino” a Masters green jacket and giving the country’s golden generation of sports stars new life.

The congratula­tions rolled in, led by a telegram from Spanish King Felipe VI saying “your achievemen­t is a spectacula­r triumph for Spanish golf.” Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy marked the occasion on Twitter.

“Sergio Garcia makes history at the Masters, winning the green jacket,” Rajoy wrote. “Amazing! Pride of Spanish sports.”

But the most important message Garcia received may have come before his first swing. Jose Maria Olazabal, who won the Masters in 1994 and 1999, told the 37- year- old Garcia on the eve of the tournament to “be calm and not let things get to me as I had in the past.”

Those words of wisdom set him on his way. And it was Spain’s true master of the clubs that brought him home.

Garcia said he thought of the late Seve Ballestero­s while overcoming setbacks that would have derailed his less confident self. Garcia overturned a two-shot deficit against Justin Rose to win on the first hole of a suddendeat­h playoff.

Ballestero­s was the first European to win the Masters in 1980. He left a lasting mark on golf, and a huge legacy for Garcia to emulate.

“He definitely popped in my mind a few times, there is no doubt about it,” Garcia said of Ballestero­s, who died in 2011 of complicati­ons resulting from a cancerous brain tumour. “And I’m sure he helped a little bit with some of those shots, some of those putts.”

Ballestero­s would have turned 60 on Sunday.

“It’s amazing to do it on Seve’s 60th birthday and to join him and Olazabal, my two idols in golf,” Garcia said.

Seve’s son Javier sent out his support for Garcia before the final round. After he won, the Seve Ballestero­s Foundation wrote in a tweet, “We are all sure Seve pushed you from above!”

Garcia’ s triumph displaced Real Madrid and Barcelona on the front pages of two sports dailies, a feat almost as amazing as donning the green jacket in this soccer-crazed country.

“AT LAST!” declared Marca’s front page, while El Mundo Deportivo proclaimed him “MAESTRO.”

Garcia’s vindicatio­n not only redefined his career, it comes while Spain deals with the fading of athletes who put the country at the forefront of sport.

Tennis star Rafael Nadal has been diminished by injuries, soccer players Iker Casillas and Xavi Hernandez are near the end, Pau Gasol is no longer a major force in the NBA, Alberto Contador has lost the title of Tour de France favourite, and Formula One driver Fernando Alonso looks downright miserable in his broken McLaren.

“So exciting after fighting so hard for so many years!” Nadal wrote on Twitter. “Congratula­tions! What joy!”

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