
Sergio isn't the first player who's had trouble negotiating the walk from the 18th green to the clubhouse.
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- It's one thing to navigate the 7,435 yards at Augusta National in the final round of the Masters, a harrowing ride of birdies and bogeys with the pressure of a green jacket riding shotgun.
Even more dangerous might be the 100 yards between the 18th green and the clubhouse.
That's where Fuzzy Zoeller had stopped toward the end of the 1997 Masters when he jokingly suggested that Tiger Woods not serve fried chicken and collard greens at the Champions Dinner, a quip that ruined his career.
Geoff Ogilvy left the course last year complaining that Augusta National had become too hard.
"That walk ... when you've had a 74 or whatever, and you walk from the 18th green to the clubhouse, it's generally a poor time to get an objective answer," Ogilvy said. "If you had asked me half an hour after I finished, I probably would have been a little more politically correct with the answer."
Sergio Garcia closed with a 74 on Sunday.
He almost made it the clubhouse.
That's when The Golf Channel stopped him for a comment, and Garcia wasn't exactly in "politically correct" mode.
"I don't like it, to tell you the truth," he said. "I don't think it's fair, and it's just too tricky. Even when it's dry, you still get mud balls in the middle of the fairway. It's just too much of a guessing game."
Mud on the ball two days after a big storm?
That should sound familiar, for it might be what cost Kenny Perry the Masters. He found a splotch of mud on the side of his ball at No. 10 in the playoff, which contributed to a shot sailing even farther left of the green, leading to bogey. Despite the devastating feeling, Perry never used that as an excuse. He should get a green vest for being gracious in defeat.
Garcia, a passionate Spaniard, certainly is entitled to his opinion. He might not have been alone in his complaint. But when The Golf Channel followed with an appropriate question -- What would he like to see changed? -- he showed his petulant side.
"I don't care," Garcia said. "They can do whatever they want. It's not my problem. I just come and here and play, and then go home."
This is not the first tantrum Garcia has thrown at a major.
After shooting a 74 in the second round of the 2002 U.S. Open in a steady rain, he blistered the USGA for not stopping play. "If Tiger Woods would have been out there, it would have been called," he said.
After losing in a playoff in the 2007 British Open at Carnoustie, he said he was playing against more than just the field, suggesting that he also had to face the golfing gods. "I should write a book on how to not miss a shot in the playoff and shoot 1 over," he said.
The difference this time is that he apologized.
And that's a good step for Garcia.
"Following my final round at the Masters, I made comments in an interview that I regret and want to apologize for," he said in a statement released by his managers at IMG. "Out of frustration, I blamed the golf course instead of putting the blame where it belongs, on myself. I didn't get it done this week. Augusta National is one of the most iconic golf courses in the game and playing in the Masters each year is an honor. I apologize to the members of Augusta National and the fans who rightfully treasure this golf course."
Let's see a show of hands for anyone who has heard Garcia use the word "iconic."
Garcia was the first European to be low amateur in his Masters debut 10 years ago, but he has never figured this place out. He had missed the cut in three of his previous four trips, and his expectations were low.
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