Tuesday, August 24, 2010

A Ryder Cup Without El Niño?

Sergio Garcia

Severiano Ballesteros only missed one Ryder Cup during his playing career and that was in his homeland back in 1997 when he was European Captain at the time - still playing competitively. Having put golf in Spain on the map from the moment he first burst on to the scene after winning The Masters in 1980 - becoming the Tournament's then youngest champion at twenty three - when he recorded a four shot victory over Gibby Gilbert and Jack Newton 


At the time his achievement received few kudos in the Spanish media as golf was very much a minority sport at that time and the young man from Pedreña, near the northern coastal city of Santander, was not a poster boy of Spanish sport and remained an unsung hero – despite winning The Open Championship in 1979 and playing in his first Ryder Cup in the same year. 


However when Ballesteros repeated the feat at Augusta in 1983, defeating US duo of Ben Crenshaw and Tom Kite, the nation paid attention as by then he had become a regular winner on the European Tour with two Suntory World Match Play titles also to his credit. In the following decade Ballesteros dominated his chosen sport and was at his most majestic in 1980’s which also started the transformation of golf in Spain to a larger national audience. 

The momentum of Ballesteros victories through those years brought others to the Tour with Antonio Garrido, Jose Maria Canizares, Jose Rivero and Manuel Piňero also playing a part in Ryder Cup campaigns over the years. Indeed, their successes brought forward another generation of players, Jose Maria Olazabal and Miguel Angel Jimenez, with the next prodigy due sometime later - Sergio Garcia. 

When the Ryder Cup moved to the European continent for the first time in 1997 it was Spain and Valderrama that were the chosen venue for the 32nd showdown between the USA and Europe with the Europeans defending the title they won courtesy of Philip Walton’s now legendary putt at Oak Hill in 1995. 

Meanwhile on the Mediterranean coast near Castellon the 1997 event caught the interest of the seventeen year old son of the local professional golfer, Victor Garcia, who had started his son playing golf at three years of age. Within nine years that young man, Sergio Garcia, had won his club championship and at 15 had set a record at the time as the youngest player to make the cut at a European Tour event - the 1995 Turespaña Open Mediterranea. 

In 1995, García became the youngest player to win the European Amateur Championship – which was then followed by the 1998 Amateur Championship. By the time he was sixteen Sergio had played in his first major, The Open in 1996 at Lytham and St Anne’s, which was won by Tom Lehman. 

So by the time the Ryder Cup came to Spain Sergio Garcia could only be captivated and the manner of the victory - given that United States were armed with all golfing horse power along with the newest star of the USPGA Tour – Tiger Woods. But despite their dominance of the tournament for the preceding decade Seve Ballestero’s team squeezed a vital one point win against his old adversary, Tom Kite, captain of the USA Team. To keep the trophy in Europe. 

Although the legendary Ryder Cup pairing of Seve and Jose Maria Olazabal, ended in 1993 due to Chema’s – as he is affectionately known – battle with a toe injury the Hondarribia native returned in 1997 to play the Ryder Cup with Garrido for his captain and former playing partner, Seve Ballesteros. 

By the time Olazabal’s next Ryder Cup came around in 1999 the Spanish membership was joined by Sergio Garcia, who had just turned professional, and was to become an important part of the match at Brookline Country Club in Boston. The Rookie signalled his intent by winning his foursomes and four ball matches ahead of the Sunday singles. 

At the start of the final day’s singles the European Team’s lead was to quickly prove insufficient as the United States Team mounted a final day comeback, winning 8 ½ points of a possible 12 points, to win the Ryder Cup Trophy for the first time since 1993. Amongst the casualties that Sunday was the young prodigy from Castellon who lost to Jim Furyk four and three. 

In the rescheduled event of 2002 at The Belfry Sergio Garcia and Lee Westwood formed a fruitful partnership winning two foursomes and a four ball - losing one of the four ball matches to Tiger Woods and Davis Love III. 

In the singles Garcia was drawn in the second match of the day behind Colin Montgomerie and lost his battle by one shot to David Thom. As the event was ultimately won by Europe courtesy of Paul McGinley on the eighteenth green, Garcia tasted Ryder Cup victory in only his second outing. 

At Oakland Hills near Detroit in 2004 Garcia was probably at his most inspiring when he secured a total of four and half points with a foursome pairing with Luke Donald capturing two points in their matches and the combination with Lee Westwood, revived for the four ball, earning with 1 ½ points from a possible two. 

But it was in the singles that El Niño really came of age after he was drawn against Phil Mickelson and started out dropping shots to go two down early on. But a run of three birdies from the ninth through the eleventh turned the numbers red setting the tone for the European Team following behind and the ideal platform for an inspired victory by Bernhard Langer’s men against the US hosts in a huge margin of 18 1/2 points to 9 1/2. 

As Garcia himself explained later; “I think it was definitely important to have the first point for our team, but I feel like I was trying not to look at the boards because we didn't start too well. But I really felt like I've been playing well enough this week. I felt like I could beat him. And I just got on a great run, 9, 10, 11. Missed a short putt on 12 for birdie and then won 13. And I just made a great 4 here on the last, on 16. But I think it's great.” 

At the K Club in 2006 Garcia was one of Ian Woosnam’s Talisman on Irish soil with Darren Clarke the popular wild card choice during that now infamous weekend in September in Kildare. Garcia again bagged four points although failed to win his singles match against Stewart Cink – with the American wild card playing the match of his life that day. 

Indeed from the off at the first hole Cink’s putt dropped for a birdie leaving Garcia battling from behind from the outset – failing in the end – losing four and three. 

Amidst the margin of Europe’s victory of 18 ½ points to 9 1/2 once again the result of Garcia’s singles match was lost as he proved a key component of the European team effort - despite his young 26 years. 

Clearly it was an environment in which he seemed to thrive. 

The trip to Valhalla in 2008 however was a wake up call as the USA rookies took to the Ryder Cup with relative ease leaving the European team experiencing a five point defeat in Louisville, Kentucky. For Garcia the burden of expectation may have become more noticeable and despite rotating his playing partners in the foursomes and four ball with his old sparring partner Lee Westwood, fellow country man Miguel Angel Jimenez and Paul Casey, Garcia only earned one point in Valhalla. 

That point was the result of two halved matches in foursomes with Casey and another halved match with Lee Westwood in the four ball. In the singles on the Sunday, pitched against the latest Asian American USPGA star, Anthony Kim, Garcia went one down after the second hole and never really recovered losing five and four. 

Once again Garcia experienced defeat on the other side of the Atlantic which came fast on the loss a month earlier at the 90th PGA Championship in Oakland Hills to Padraig Harrington - where on that final Sunday Garcia ended up in another head-to-head after dropping a lead on the 15th and 16th holes. 

Playing against the same player in the PGA Championship who had beaten him in playoff at Carnoustie in The Open Championship the previous summer, El Niño gave Harrington an opening after hitting his approach at the 16th into the water, allowing the Dubliner then repeat what he had done in Scotland the previous summer - roll in clutch putts on the final three holes, two for pars and one for birdie to seal the win – leaving Garcia naturally aghast. 

In the wake of the recent 92nd PGA Championship at Whistling Straits and with the 2010 Celtic Manor looming Sergio Garcia has decided to take a two month break from the game for the first time since he was three years old. So is now scheduled for the first time, since he played in the Ryder Cup eleven years ago, to watch it all on TV – if he chooses. 

At the time of writing there is also a possibility that the European Ryder Cup team could for the first time in three decades take on the USA without any player from Spain in the team - taking the event back to a time when the team was known as Great Britain and Ireland. 

Although with Miguel Angel Jimenez, El Mecanico, making a last minute decision to forfeit a family commitment to play in the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles it is clear that the Ryder Cup spirit - so embodied by Seve Ballesteros over the decades - and who still holds the best percentage win record, is still truly alive and well with the pony tailed man from Malaga. 

As El Mecanico does his utmost to ensure he earns the right to play in the 2010 Ryder Cup t is a pity that the player who was so inspired by the Pedreña legend, and who has won 16 points in five Ryder Cup outings, will be many miles away from Newport come October – in every sense of the word.. 

Maybe Seve and Sergio should watch the event together in some quiet golf club somewhere in Northern Spain? It would be even better, if Sergio was there in Celtic Manor with Seve leaving cryptic notes on his locker door as inspiration. But that is not to be this time. 

Que Pena!




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