Sergio Garcia has been a challenging desert to determine over the many years. We've seen the Excellent Sergio, bouncing at Medinah, prominent at the Ryder Cup, enjoying well for 54 gaps at degrees, and the Bad Sergio, spitting in glasses, accusing someone bringing a sand for his bogey on the 72nd opening at carnoustie, and the factor about the 33-year-old Spaniard is you really never know which one you'll get.
On Saturday at the participants Tournament, Garcia was combined with competition Timber for the twentieth period of time in his profession and it doe's not take a math wizzard to undestand that Competition has had Sergio's cards for most of his profession.
But is competition ever really accountable for a bad taken that Garcia hits? According to Sergio, yes. In an meeting performed during a climate wait on Saturday, Sergio went right at the No. 1 golf player on the entire world when requested about a bad second taken he hit on the second opening, a par-5, that led to a bogey.
"I wouldn't say he didn't see that I was prepared, but you do have a experience when the other guy (Tiger) is going to hit. Right to hit. Right as I was on top of the backswing, he drawn a 5-wood or 3-wood out of the difficult and, obviously, everbody began screaming, so that didn't help very much."
This isn't intially that someone has gotten up how difficult it is to perform in the same team as Competition, but from my storage it's intially that someone actually went at Timber about it.
(Related: Lee West wood whiffs on taken from difficult )
Garcia, god really like him, is a man that has spent a lot of his profession looking around for something accountable. He has had difficulties recognizing the mistakes as his, and his looks like another section in a lot of factors that "aren't Sergio's mistake."
The factor is, there could be some authenticity to Sergio's contact here. NBC did an excellent job of displying a replay of what occurred quickly, and sure enough, Garcia was about to hit when Timber presented his fairway timber in an make an effort to go for the natural from the remaining Crops.
Right when Garcia created his complete move on the par-5 he seemed remaining in an tired style, identifying the place that competition was standing as the lovers clapped at wood's choice to go for the natural in two.
Tiger lovers will leap on Sergio, competition haters will get Garcia's returning, but for now that last circular at TPC Sawgrass just got a whole lot juicier.
On Saturday at the participants Tournament, Garcia was combined with competition Timber for the twentieth period of time in his profession and it doe's not take a math wizzard to undestand that Competition has had Sergio's cards for most of his profession.
But is competition ever really accountable for a bad taken that Garcia hits? According to Sergio, yes. In an meeting performed during a climate wait on Saturday, Sergio went right at the No. 1 golf player on the entire world when requested about a bad second taken he hit on the second opening, a par-5, that led to a bogey.
"I wouldn't say he didn't see that I was prepared, but you do have a experience when the other guy (Tiger) is going to hit. Right to hit. Right as I was on top of the backswing, he drawn a 5-wood or 3-wood out of the difficult and, obviously, everbody began screaming, so that didn't help very much."
This isn't intially that someone has gotten up how difficult it is to perform in the same team as Competition, but from my storage it's intially that someone actually went at Timber about it.
(Related: Lee West wood whiffs on taken from difficult )
Garcia, god really like him, is a man that has spent a lot of his profession looking around for something accountable. He has had difficulties recognizing the mistakes as his, and his looks like another section in a lot of factors that "aren't Sergio's mistake."
The factor is, there could be some authenticity to Sergio's contact here. NBC did an excellent job of displying a replay of what occurred quickly, and sure enough, Garcia was about to hit when Timber presented his fairway timber in an make an effort to go for the natural from the remaining Crops.
Right when Garcia created his complete move on the par-5 he seemed remaining in an tired style, identifying the place that competition was standing as the lovers clapped at wood's choice to go for the natural in two.
Tiger lovers will leap on Sergio, competition haters will get Garcia's returning, but for now that last circular at TPC Sawgrass just got a whole lot juicier.