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Pressure on Garcia to
follow Woods steps
A year ago, Sergio Garcia
brought his energy, his scissors kick and his good-looking game to the Masters.
He was the low-scoring amateur at Augusta and offered a tantalizing glimpse of
the future of golf.
El Nino is back as a professional
this time, with a different set of expectations, some of which he may not be
ready to handle.
With every success, there
has been failure. His exciting performances at the PGA Championship and Ryder
Cup have been offset by the firings of two caddies and his struggles on the tour
early this year.
``You have to realize, I'm
still very young, still 20, and there's a lot of time to come,'' Garcia said.
``And if it doesn't come this year or next year, I'm sure it will come, because
of confidence within myself.''
Still, many people think
the Spaniard should be on or near the leaderboard every week, starting right
now. They envision Garcia setting himself up as a long-term challenger to Woods
and giving the sport a rivalry in the 21st century.
Those are the expectations
brought by his success last year.
It was at the PGA Championship
last August that Garcia pulled off the shot of the year, banging a 6-iron from
between two tree roots, then running up the fairway -- scissors kick included
-- to watch the ball land 60 feet from the cup.
It was a dangerous play
that showed the nature of his swashbuckling style. Garcia finished third, but
got the golf world excited about a possible rivalry with Woods.
A month later, Garcia offered
up some of the most scintillating golf in the Ryder Cup, going 3-1-1 and leaping
into the arms of partner Jesper
Parnevik after halving a match against David
Duval and Davis Love III.
But there has been no third
act to Garcia's show, unless you count the day he threw his shoe into the crowd
after slipping on a tee shot at the World Match Play championship in England.
He has shot only one stroke-play
round under 70 this year, and is showing signs he may not be completely prepared
for the spotlight.
``Sergio needs time to figure
things out,'' Woods said. ``He's got a lot to learn about this tour and about
himself.''
Garcia has taken to blaming
his struggles on other people, most notably his caddies. He fired one of the
best in the game, Fanny Sunesson, two weeks ago after shooting an 82 and missing
the cut at The Players Championship.
``At the end, she wasn't
happy and I wasn't happy,'' Garcia said. ``And if I'm not happy on the golf course,
I usually don't play my golf.''
Late last year, Garcia split
with Jerry Higginbotham, another caddie considered to be among the best.
``Sergio's only 19 and he
wants everything,'' Higginbotham said at the time of his departure. ``He'll probably
learn down the road that just because you have one bad week, it's not the caddie's
fault.''
It has been more than one
bad week.
In fact, Garcia hasn't finished
higher than 35th in the four stroke-play events he has entered this year.
He has been criticized for
playing with too flat a swing plane. And many critics suggest he needs somebody
other than his father, Victor, working with him on his game.
Garcia comes into the Masters
trying to match Woods' accomplishments of 1996 and 1997, when Woods posted the
lowest amateur score the first year, followed by his history-making victory the
next.
As he heads into Augusta,
however, Garcia is more concerned about getting comfortable with his own game
than trying to create a rivalry with Woods.
``I know I can play well
because I've shown it,'' Garcia said. ``There's still a lot of time, and I'll
try to take it easy. If it comes perfect, that's good, or if I have to wait a
little, I'll wait.''
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