The Peterborough Examiner

Sergio finally gets his major

One of golf’s most tragically doomed figures wins the Masters

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Sergio Garcia was trying to channel Seve Ballestero­s on what would have been his hero’s 60th birthday, but he probably didn’t want to channel him quite that much.

One of golf’s most tragically doomed figures over the past two decades survived a wild closing nine holes to finally seize the major title that has eluded him for so long with a Masters playoff win over Justin Rose. It was a Ballestero­sstyle victory, complete with several visits into the Augusta National shrubbery, penalty strokes, choked putts — and just enough spectacula­r shotmaking.

The win wasn’t secured until Garcia gave up a healthy lead early, and then missed short birdie putts on the 16th and 18th holes, the latter of which would have handed him the tournament.

He won, finally, on the first playoff hole with a birdie to Rose’s messy bogey.

“He’s probably got Seve with him right now,” Canada’s Adam Hadwin had said earlier on Sunday. Maybe he did.

Garcia, trying to break a 73-major winless streak, the second-longest among active golfers, jumped out to a three-shot lead on Sunday only to give it all back and then some. He roared back again, but a sixfoot miss for birdie on 16 allowed playing partner Rose to reclaim the lead by a shot. The 36-yearold Englishman, Garcia’s frequent Ryder Cup teammate, gave the lead back on the following hole, and left the title there for Garcia to take, but the Spaniard’s miss on the closing hole gave Rose life in the playoff.

It took awhile for the Masters to serve up its traditiona­l Sunday drama, but just when it looked like Garcia had done very Sergio things to play himself out of yet another major, the 37-year-old Spaniard rallied. After dropping shots on the 10th and 11th holes to fall two shots behind Rose, Garcia pulled his drive on the par-5 13th into the left bushes. He took a penalty stroke for an unplayable lie, as Rose hit his second shot just over the green for what looked like an easy up-and-down birdie. But after a wedge and a steely par-saving putt from Garcia, Rose missed a six-foot birdie attempt and what looked like a possible four-shot lead instead was just two.

Garcia, with 19 years’ worth of disappoint­ment in the major championsh­ips behind him — literally if not figurative­ly — followed that with a birdie on the 14th and then a spectacula­r eagle on the 15th hole, dropping a 14-foot putt that just died into the centre of the cup. Rose followed that with a birdie of his own, and the two were tied at 9-under going to the 16th tee. No one else on the course was anywhere near their lead.

Rose seized the lead with a birdie on the par-3 16th that Garcia couldn’t match, but the Englishman gave it back with a bogey on 17.

Sunday began with a number of players bunched behind the leaders, including Jordan Spieth, who had made Augusta National look alarmingly easy over the past few years, minus a couple of meltdowns, and Rickie Fowler, who has long looked ready to break into the major-winning club. Former Masters winners like Adam Scott and Charl Schwartzel also lurked.

But in the early going, when the safe bet was that Garcia would crumple in the moment, he instead played like the guy with the least to prove. He birdied two of his first three holes, and would have done so on all three had he not missed a five-foot birdie putt on the par-5 second hole.

But his biggest moment on the opening stretch came on the seventh hole, where he went from the trees to the front bunker to above the hole — and coolly drained a downhill seven-footer to save par. Just like the par-saver he made on 18 on Saturday evening, it was the kind of putt that had killed Garcia in the game’s biggest tournament­s before, the kind of putt that explained why he had gone 73 majors without a win.

But while the other contenders faded, allowing Garcia to build an early three-shot lead, it was his playing partner that put on the heat. Rose followed a bogey at 5 with three straight birdies, the last of which appeared to spook Garcia, who missed at short birdie putt at the eighth hole that would have kept him in the lead alone. Instead, the two walked to the ninth tee at 8-under, and no one else within three shots of them.

Fowler and Scott had been evenpar on the front nine, and Hoffman was 1-over, including an ugly double-bogey on the seventh. Most surprising­ly, Spieth, who had earlier gone 29 straight holes without a bogey, had four of them on his front nine for an opening 38. The guy least likely to shoot himself right out of contention had done just that.

It was down to Garcia and Rose, all but in match play as they entered the back nine. Two holes later, Rose was up by two strokes. It was a five-shot swing over just six holes.

But it turned out the drama was just getting started.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/AP ?? Sergio Garcia reacts after making his birdie putt on the 18th green to win the Masters Sunday in Augusta, Ga.
MATT SLOCUM/AP Sergio Garcia reacts after making his birdie putt on the 18th green to win the Masters Sunday in Augusta, Ga.
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