Sergio Garcia has admitted it took him three months to put the controversy surrounding his remarks about Tiger Woods behind him last season, but is looking forward to making more headlines for his on-course performances in 2014.
Garcia escaped official sanctions for what could be construed as a racist remark about Woods, pictured below, after offering an unreserved apology for his comments at the European Tour’s annual awards ceremony in May.
During a Q&A session involving the full Ryder Cup team, the 34-year-old was asked if he would invite Woods to dinner one night at the approaching US Open to settle their differences, which resurfaced at the Players Championship earlier that month.
“We will have him round every night,” Garcia said. “We will serve fried chicken.”
Garcia subsequently shook hands with Woods on the practice range at Merion and left the world number one a handwritten note after several attempts to apologise in person, while the pair played together in the third round of the BMW Championship in September.
“If you take away probably about three months in the middle of the season where we all know what happened, the whole year was good,” Garcia reflected ahead of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship which gets under way today. “I started the year very nicely with a lot of good, high finishes with three good chances of winning, and then I finished the year quite strongly again. That was nice to see. I think it was just the combination of confidence, feeling good about myself, feeling good on the golf course and just letting things happen a little bit.
“I’ve just got to try to keep doing similar things. We all know how important the Ryder Cup is for all of us here, so it would be nice to get going like we did last year and make sure you get your nose way into that Ryder Cup team.”
Asked how long it took to put his row with Woods behind him, Garcia added: “I don’t know exactly how long, but it was probably a tough three months at least. But it was a good learning experience. I learned a lot from it and it made me stronger.”
Garcia was predictably heckled by a handful of spectators at the US Open, but the Spaniard wisely did not make an issue of it and declined an offer from officials to have the offenders removed.
“I don’t know if I was prepared for it,” the world number 10 added. “It wasn’t certain to know what was going to happen and it was rough, it was difficult. Only by a minority, but they made themselves heard.
“But the good thing is the majority of the people knew me and what happened and so they accepted my apologies and they could see that it was truthful. It wasn’t easy, because I guess that minority are always the loudest and they made themselves heard, and it’s never nice to be reminded of something that you don’t like and you don’t enjoy. I guess the only thing I can do is keep going and do what I love to do and try to show everybody what you are and how you are and hopefully that’s good enough for them to like it.”
Loving golf was not something Garcia was doing a few years ago, but a long break in August 2010 followed by being a vice-captain for Europe’s Ryder Cup victory at Celtic Manor helped turn things around. “It was tough but at that time it was the right thing,” he added. “I guess I needed to see things from a different perspective to realise what was going on. And it was nice to at least be a part of it in a different way and feel the warmth of the people and the energy of the Ryder Cup.
“Disconnecting a little bit from the game for that month and a half I took off, obviously helped me to calm down a little bit, think about everything that was going on in my life, and kind of tried to refocus it.
“I started the next year with good attitude and energy, with some good feelings going on.”