The Arizona Republic

Garcia focused on Open; wedding next

- STEVE DIMEGLIO

SOUTHPORT, England - Two weeks ago, Sergio Garcia was wearing the green jacket while sitting in the Royal Box at the All England Club watching his good friend, Rafael Nadal, win on Centre Court during Wimbledon.

In less than two weeks he will walk down the aisle for the first time and marry Angela Akins in a lavish ceremony in Texas.

For now, however, Garcia’s attention is solely on the British Open, the one major he has held closest to his heart since he was a child.

“No, (my mind is) on the Open, don’t worry. It’s going to be where it has to be this week. Angela has been doing a great job of getting everything ready for the wedding,” Garcia said upon his arrival to Royal Birkdale, home to the 146th edition of the British Open. “Obviously we’re really excited for next week. But we have something that we’re also extremely excited about this week, and we want to be here giving everything we have.”

It’s evident that Garcia, long haunted by his failure to win a major championsh­ip, is in a good place these days after snapping a 0-for-73 streak in the four biggest events in golf last April at the Masters. His smiles are brighter, his playful attitude abundant and his penchant to mope nearly non-existent. He’s ranked No. 5 in the world, has two wins this year and is coming off a tie for second in the BMW Internatio­nal Open in his last start.

Yet he insists he hasn’t changed since he beat Justin Rose on the first playoff hole at Augusta National and drove off Magnolia Lane with the green jacket.

“I still treat everyone the same way that I did before, with respect, and the way my parents taught me to. It’s great to be able to have that extra jacket in my closet and to have that major. But anything else, it doesn’t change,” Garcia said. “I mean, to be totally honest, I don’t think I’m happier. I’m really happy. But fortunatel­y for me I’ve been very happy pretty much my whole life. So that hasn’t changed. Like we say in Spain, the more sugar, the sweeter it is. So obviously winning the Masters made it even sweeter, but it doesn’t mean that I wasn’t happy before.”

Seeing the large yellow scoreboard­s and all the signage associated with the Open ignited his spirits as soon as he drove into the Birkdale parking lot. This is his 21st start in the Open. He has 10 top-10s in the event, with a playoff loss to Padraig Harrington in 2007 and a tie for second in 2014 as his best results. In his two starts at Birkdale, he tied for 29th in 1998 and tied 51st in 2008.

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