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Garcia beats Toms in
playoff
The grandiose goals that
Sergio Garcia set for himself made it clear he thought he was capable of toppling
Tiger Woods.
The young Spaniard certainly
came out swinging.
Garcia made a pair of 10-foot
birdie putts on the 18th hole Sunday, the first one to get into a playoff with
PGA champion David Toms and the second one to win the Mercedes Championships in
the first PGA Tour event of the year.
``You can't dream of a better
way to start the year,'' Garcia said.
His ultimate goal is to
win the money title on the PGA Tour and the European tour, which no one has ever
done. Of course, that means ending Woods' three-year reign in America.
When the final putt fell,
Garcia dropped his putter and raised his arms, jubilant as ever. Tournament officials
approached the 18th green in Garcia's new Mercedes SL500 Sport car, but the bigger
prize is his $720,000 check.
``I'm leading the money
list,'' Garcia said. ``When I get old I can say to my nephews, 'I was the money
leader -- for at least one week.'''
Maybe longer, especially
since he will go over to the Sony Open in Honolulu next week and compete in another
$4 million tournament while Woods heads to New Zealand.
Garcia closed with a 9-under
64 and finished at 18-under 274. It reminded him of his victory in South Africa
in November, when he closed with a 9-under 63 and beat Ernie Els in a playoff.
For Toms, it was nearly
a repeat of his PGA Championship victory, when he laid up on the par-4 18th and
made par to beat Phil Mickelson.
Unable to reach the downhill,
633-yard closing hole on the Plantation Course in two shots, he laid up and then
hit wedge into about 10 feet for a chance to win in regulation. With a steady
mist falling under cloudy skies, the putt didn't have enough speed and broke away
at the last moment.
``I felt like I was going
to make it. I was convinced I was going to make it and I was going to win the
tournament right there,'' Toms said. ``I was shocked that I left it short because
when I looked up halfway, I thought it was in.''
Toms birdied four of the
last six holes to shoot 67. He knew he was at a disadvantage going into the playoff
because of Garcia's length.
``That's not a medium-hitter's
hole,'' Toms said.
Sure enough, Garcia's approach
shot with a 3-wood came up 30 yards short to set up an easy pitch, which he ran
past 10 feet -- in almost exactly the spot where Toms had his birdie putt in regulation.
Toms hit a 3-wood that landed 142 yards away in the rough, hit wedge to 30 feet
and made par.
Both of them were in a playoff
at the last PGA Tour event -- a four-man playoff at the Tour Championship won
by Mike Weir.
``Don't worry,'' Garcia
told him. ``I think this time, one of us will win.''
Garcia won for the third
time on tour in his last 11 events, and he became the first player since Woods
to win in his first appearance at the Mercedes Championships.
Woods had enough money to
win the money title on both sides of the Atlantic in 1999 and 2000, but he wasn't
a European tour member. Garcia plans to play the minimum 15 events on the PGA
Tour and 11 events in Europe.
``I never had a doubt I
could do it,'' he said.
Woods, who started the final
round 10 strokes behind, closed with a 65 and finished in a tie for 10th, seven
strokes behind Garcia and Toms. He has never finished worse than 10th in his six
season-opening tournaments.
``Very good start'' to the
season, Woods said. ``It's just unfortunate for me that I didn't putt that well
the last two days with the wind howling.''
Woods boarded his private
plane for New Zealand to play in the New Zealand Open, despite the fact a letter
containing cyanide and threatening to disrupt the tournament was sent to the U.S.
Embassy in New Zealand.
Kenny Perry, who shared
the 54-hole lead with Scott Verplank, needed eagle on the last hole to get into
the playoff but hit his drive into the left rough. He holed a meaningless 40-footer
for birdie and closed with a 69 to finish at 275.
Garcia started the final
round four strokes back, but wasted little time getting into contention on a breezy,
cloudy afternoon off the west coast of Maui.
The wind was not nearly
as fierce as it was Saturday, turning the final round into such a shootout that
six players had at least a share of the lead at one point.
Garcia nearly drove the
downhill, 398-yard sixth hole for an easy birdie, then hit his approach into the
521-yard ninth to about 2 feet for a tap-in eagle. He holed a slick, 12-footer
birdie putt on the 10th to take the lead at 15 under.
Chris DiMarco, playing in
the group behind, made birdie on No. 9 to join Garcia, but DiMarco played the
back nine in 38. Verplank disappeared early by hitting into the canyon along No.
5 and taking double bogey.
Defending champion Jim Furyk
charged into a share of the lead at one point, but his 65 left him three strokes
short.
Toms refused to go away.
Twice he dropped out of
the race, but only momentarily. He atoned for a bogey on the par-5 fifth hole
by pitching it for eagle on No. 9. Then, when he was two strokes off the lead
with six holes to play, he birdied four of the next five holes.
He needed one more birdie
to get his year started in style, although he had few complaints.
``I had a chance to win.
I had a real good chance to win,'' he said.
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