On an unprecedented day in LIV Golf’s young history, captain Sergio Garcia and his Fireballs GC produced a storybook finish for their Spanish fans on home soil at LIV Golf Andalucía.
Garcia rallied from seven strokes down to win his first LIV Golf individual title on the second sudden-death playoff hole against Crushers GC’s Anirban Lahiri.
Meanwhile, teammates Abraham Ancer and David Puig beat the Crushers duo of captain Bryson DeChambeau and Paul Casey in the team aggregate-score playoff as the Fireballs – with three Spaniards on the roster – swept both trophies at Real Club Valderrama.
It was LIV Golf’s first double playoff, and just the second team playoff in league history. The first team playoff came earlier this year at LIV Golf Adelaide, when the home Australian team – Ripper GC – also won.
For Garcia, the script couldn’t have been written any better, as he won for the first time after three previous playoff losses. That it happened on his favourite course, one in which he’s won three other professional events and has now finished inside the top 10 in 16 of his 17 starts, made it even more special.
“To be totally honest, there’s a connection between Valderrama and myself that I can’t even explain it,” said the 44-year-old Garcia, who ended a four-year winless drought while winning his 37th professional title.
Garcia started the day at even par, seven shots behind overnight leader Lahiri. But the Spanish star played flawless golf for 17 holes, posting six birdies and applying pressure on Lahiri, who was trying to break his own winless drought of nine years.
While Garcia suffered his only bogey of the day with a three-putt at the par-three 3rd to wrap up his five-under 66, Lahiri birdied the par-five 17th. That put the tournament in Lahiri’s hands going to the par-four 18th, the most difficult hole on the course this week.
Lahiri found the middle of the green with his approach shot and rolled his birdie attempt to three feet to set up the potential winning par. But with a chance to win the individual title and secure the team title for the Crushers, he missed the putt for a final-round 73 to drop back to five under and set up the double playoff.
Garcia was riding in a van back to the clubhouse at the time.
“We obviously heard the crowds going crazy, so we figured that he might have missed his par putt,” Garcia said. “It was nice to be able to have another shot at it.”
Garcia and Lahiri each parred their first playoff hole. Meanwhile, in the team playoff right behind them, DeChambeau found trouble off the 18th tee and had to lay up with his second shot. Casey’s approach finished in the rough behind the green. DeChambeau bogeyed the hole while Ancer and Puig made easy pars to claim the Fireballs’ first team victory of the season.
Like his captain, Lahiri’s errant tee shot on the second playoff hole left him in trouble, and Garcia won with a par, with his teammates and family racing onto the green to drench him in celebratory champagne.
“Obviously individual for me, it’s a dream come true to do it on my favourite course in front of my family and friends and in front of my teammates,” Garcia said. “But to even make it even better by winning the team championship, too, it was amazing. So proud of these guys, the way they played.”
On the flip side, it was heartbreak for the Crushers, who have won twice this season and lead the season-long points standings as they look to repeat as Team Champions.
“It sucks. Losing is never fun,” said DeChambeau. “That’s what makes winning so much better. I feel for Baan.”
Perhaps it was simply fate for the Fireballs and their captain to win on home turf in front of a partisan crowd.
“A dream weekend for all of us,” said young Fireballs star Eugenio Chacarra. “Super happy for Sergio. He’s been up there a lot, and he’s been playing at a high level for 20 plus years. It’s really nice to see it from close every single day, and so happy for him that he got it done on his favourite course.”
England’s Tyrrell Hatton took third place on four under, while South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen tied for fourth with America’s Patrick Reed after a final round of 69 that included three birdies and a bogey.
Photo: Angel Martinez/Getty Images