The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

In fourth decade of Ryder Cup play, Garcia still going strong

- By Doug Ferguson

Sergio Garcia didn’t waste much time making a point on how he values the Ryder Cup.

He was a teenager — at 19, still the youngest player in Ryder Cup history — and just over five months removed from being the low amateur at the Masters, when Garcia and Jesper Parnevik took down Tiger Woods and Tom Lehman in foursomes at Brookline.

That was his first point. And that was just the start.

Now with more gray than dark brown in his stubble, the 41-yearold Spaniard sets off for his 10th Ryder Cup at Whistling Straits to extend a remarkable run defined by numbers.

He is one of only four players to compete in Ryder Cups across four decades, the first one in 1999, with no reason to think this one will be the last.

Garcia has won 251/2 points (winning 62% of his matches), which already is the most in Ryder Cup history. That’s as many points as

this U.S. team combined. He is two wins away from breaking the Ryder Cup record held by Nick Faldo, which would be sweet for other reasons.

Perhaps most telling is the list of Americans who have lost to

him — Woods and Phil Mickelson (four times each), Davis Love III and David Duval, Steve Stricker and Jim Furyk.

“Sergio Garcia loves the Ryder Cup,” European captain Padraig Harrington said, a rare occasion when the Irishman felt no need to elaborate.

Garcia was on stage a few weeks ago with Collin Morikawa, the 24-year-old California­n about to make his Ryder Cup debut. They took part in a Q&A during the Payne Stewart Award ceremony in Atlanta, and with Dan Hicks of NBC Sports as the host,

Ryder Cup was bound to be mentioned. Hicks asked Garcia if he had any advice.

“Share the secrets,” Morikawa said with a laugh.

“I really haven’t done that well in it, anyway,” Garcia said, laughing along with the audience. “No, you’ll have fun. It’s amazing.”

The Ryder Cup is everything to him, as much as that Masters green jacket he won in 2017 for his first major. And yes, he’s done OK. But while he has contribute­d points, that’s not how Garcia keeps score.

He has been on six winning teams as a layer, one as a last-minute vice captain in Wales.

“Being the highest points scorer in Ryder Cup history, that was never my goal,” Garcia said. “It’s something that I never thought

bout because I was always focused on winning the Ryder Cup as a team. I never thought, ‘Oh, even if we lose, if I win 3 or 31/2 points, I had a great Ryder Cup.’ No, that doesn’t do it for me.

“I’ve always said I could win five matches. If we don’t win the Ryder Cup, it’s not a good Ryder Cup for me,“he said. “It’s not the way my brain works and probably is one of the reasons why I’ve been fortunate to be a part of so many teams and do so well in it.”

The passion he brings is reminiscen­t of Spaniards from another generation, Seve Ballestero­s and Jose Maria Olazabal, the latter who was Garcia’s fourballs partners in 2006 (they won both their matches at The K Club).

It is on equal terms as Ian Poulter, another European whose legacy is the Ryder Cup.

“I certainly had my heart set on Ian and Sergio being the soul of a Ryder Cup team,” said Harrington, who used two of his three captain’s picks on them.

 ?? AP 2018 ?? Europe’s Sergio Garcia (right) celebrates with Ian Poulter after Europe won the Ryder Cup in 2018 in Paris. Garcia is one of only four players to compete in Ryder Cups across four decades, the first one in 1999, with no reason to think this weekend’s appearance will be his last.
AP 2018 Europe’s Sergio Garcia (right) celebrates with Ian Poulter after Europe won the Ryder Cup in 2018 in Paris. Garcia is one of only four players to compete in Ryder Cups across four decades, the first one in 1999, with no reason to think this weekend’s appearance will be his last.

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