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Eyes on Sergio Garcia’s eyes in emotional Sanderson Farms Championship victory

Photo by Getty Images

By Cameron Morfitt, PGATOUR.com

All week the focus was on his eyes.

Every time Sergio Garcia stroked a putt, the cameras showed a battle-scarred 40-year-old who had missed so many over his career he’d seen enough. Perhaps, he reasoned, the seeing itself was the problem. Why watch? There was no upside. He led his lids fall, trusted the stroke, and when the last putt fell, a kick-in birdie on 18 to beat Peter Malnati by one, those eyes filled with tears.

It was his first victory on the PGA Tour since the 2017 Masters, and the first since he became a father, first to 2-year-old Azalea and then to 6-month-old Enzo. More than his putting woes, or his so-called slump – he won on the European Tour just over a year ago – he thought of family.

He especially thought of the two uncles he lost to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

“My father has a lot of family in Madrid,” Garcia said. “He’s one of nine siblings, and unfortunately we lost two of his brothers because of Covid, one at the beginning, Uncle Paco, and one just last Saturday actually – not yesterday but the Saturday before, Uncle Angel. You know, it’s sad,” he continued. “It’s sad. And I know that a lot of families have lost a lot more people, but you never want to lose anyone like that, and I wanted to win this for them.”

Sometimes golf is hard just because it’s hard. And sometimes life just gets in the way.

Garcia had never played the Sanderson Farms, and it was hard to know what to make of him, especially the eyes-wide-shut putting. He was a 10-time PGA Tour winner, but he hadn’t won since the 2017 Masters. He’d missed three of his previous four cuts on tour, had fallen out of the world top 50, and was coming off a season in which he recorded just one top-25 finish.

To put that in perspective, he had never recorded fewer than four top-25s in 21 previous seasons, and missed the Playoffs for just the second time in the FedExCup era.

Two shots stood out Sunday: His 5-wood second shot that trundled up to within four feet of the pin for eagle, and his 8-iron approach on 18, which set up a 30-inch birdie. The ball-striking that has defined his career took center stage at Country Club of Jackson, as Garcia was first in Strokes Gained: Off the Tee, Strokes Gained: Tee to Green, and driving distance.

Although he was only 28th in Strokes Gained: Putting, he was in positive numbers all four days.

His unusual putting, which he said he’s been doing on and off for the last three-plus years, is working.

“I was believing in myself the whole week,” said Garcia, who moved to fourth in the FedExCup just three events into the new season. “I obviously hit a bad putt on six for par, but I stuck with it, I kept going, I kept believing, I kept telling myself you’re doing great, just keep doing what you’re doing, it’s great. You’re not going to make every single putt.”

He is asked incessantly about the closed eyes, and it would be easy to have doubts. As one reporter here pointed out, it looks not just odd but like the act of a desperate man. But Garcia and his wife Angela talked about it and agreed: If he didn’t commit to something and really give it a chance, the odds were remote that he was ever going to settle into a groove on the greens.

His experience tuning out the doubters, all those people who harped on his inability to win a Major, served him well. Now he’s peaking again with another Masters only a month away.

“Well, it’s obviously a boost of confidence, there’s no doubt,” Garcia said. “Even if I would have not won it, it still would have been a massive high for me this week. To be able to do a lot of the things that I did, it meant a lot. It showed me a lot of what I still have, and what I still can do.”


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