Sunday, May 12, 2013

Members Championship 2013: Sergio Garcia's Unbelievable Failure Illustrates Biggest Downside.

He absolutely imploded on Sunday with the final round of a 2013 Players Championship, and you could nearly always count with him to blow it should the pressure is on.

One of the more talented golfers on the globe, Garcia has repeatedly botched attempts at winning big tournaments and is famous for having never won an essential championship.

Therefore, nobody was surprised when he dropped not only one but two shots into the drink on the famous island green—the 17th hole for the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. ESPN's Rick Reilly outlined the sad truth that Garcia's meltdown is an item he'll never live down:

After posting some sort of dreaded "other" on Virtually no. 17 (quadruple-bogey seven), Garcia subsequently proceeded to send your partner's tee shot on Zero. 18 into the liquid, making it the next ball to land inside the drink in the final two holes in the tournament.

As Jason Sobel of the Golf Channel pointed released when Garcia finally limped with, he dropped six strokes inside final two holes:

Previous to his collapse, Garcia was tied with the lead at 12-under par by using two holes left to help you play on Sunday with the 2013 Players Championship.

After playing well but not great golf through the main 10 holes, Garcia followed a tear, making birdie with three of his following six holes, including a par-five No. 16 to tie Tiger woods and Jeff Maggert to your lead with two slots left to play.

Garcia simply finds different ways to choke when the difficulty is on, and this fact couldn't had been more clearly illustrated the following Sunday.

Garcia has as a lot natural talent as any golfer on the earth, but when faced using pressure situations he cannot discover a method to remember how to hit the ball usually.

After winning this same tournament back 2008, Garcia was on his tactic to having a phenomenal season—his best ever for a pro.

He needs to have won the Barclays (just 1 tournament later), but he celebrated prematurely and fell victim to Vijay Singh in a playoff.

Finally, in the final tournament that year—the Excursion Championship—Garcia allowed Camillo Villegas to beat him in the playoff with two pars.

He's had other failures to close the offer in more recent story, including the 2012 Barclays when ever he blew a two-stroke lead inside the final round.

Underwhelming pressurized doesn't begin to lower it. When the burden is on, Garcia finds different ways to lose. He's only won 8-10 PGA tournaments in this career—a paltry number for someone regarding his abilities.

Perhaps this means that he is so wanting to point the finger at others in lieu of taking personal responsibility with regard to his poor play. Keep in mind, he made a large fuss about Woods distracting him over the second hole Saturday after he'd hit an insufficient shot into the green.

Video evidence after the fact showed that the noise Garcia referred to actually occurred while he was standing over your partner's ball, not when your dog actually addressed and hit it (h/t Bob Harig with ESPN. com).

That's upon response we expect out of our politicians, but the hole had nothing related to Garcia's mistakes. He went a step further in his own defense, per the PGA See:

It's like he's declaring, "I only get a multitude of good shots given in my opinion by the golf Gods, so I should be happy with those they give me. inch

Unless Garcia finally starts owning as much his mistakes and prevents pointing fingers at others and with the course, he'll never win a leading championship. It's a waste, too, because he has much more talent in his pinkie kids finger than some players have within their entire body.

Via: The British Alex Dowsett wins the time trial and Nibali is the new leader

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