Ernie Els, never behind all week, survived a sudden attack of the jitters to
win his fourth Cisco World Match Play title at Wentworth on Sunday.
In his first appearance since the birth of his son Ben two weeks ago - and
three days on from his own 33rd birthday - the Open champion made it a time of
triple celebration by beating Sergio Garcia 2&1 in the 36-hole final.
On Wednesday Els had said: "I couldn't ask for a better year - win a major
and a little boy comes along." But if he really wanted icing on the cake, this
did very nicely.
Having sent Colin Montgomerie to his heaviest-ever defeat - 6&5 - in the
quarter-finals and then seeing off Vijay Singh, Els appeared to be cruising at
five up after 12 and three up with six to play.
But with the winning line in sight he visited two bunkers and the crowd on the
31st and double-bogeyed it, then badly pulled a four-foot putt to bogey the
next.
Garcia, now only one down, had a real opportunity, but the 22-year-old,
shortly to take possession of the house he has bought from Els in Orlando, could
not take over the match as well.
He hooked his drive at the 34th and after two hacks - one of them left-handed
- he conceded the hole, then was twice in the trees on the 571-yard next.
Els did not have to putt again and so moved one behind Gary Player and Seve
Ballesteros, both of whom lifted the trophy five times in their careers.
"Sergio always keeps it interesting," he said. "He is so talented. I was
not putting well - I guess I made all my putts against Colin - and I felt pretty
down when I missed that one to be only one-up.
"But to win this title again now means even more because of where I live.
It's become home." His British base is beside the 16th hole of the West
Course.
Els' success, however, came only after a puzzling concession by the Spaniard
early in their 36-hole final.
Match referee John Paramor was as surprised as anyone on the 396-yard seventh
when Garcia told Els to pick up his marker when there was still a chance he
could halve the hole.
The only European to make it into the last four missed the green and then saw
his chip fail to make it up the tier and roll back towards him about 60 feet
from the flag.
He needed to hole the putt for his par, but with Els six feet away in two he
did not try and walked to the next tee.
That was strange, but Els' start was simply brilliant.
Els' outward 30 in the morning matched his start against Montgomerie on
Friday, when he went on to break the championship record with a 12 under par
round of 60.
That score seemed a possibility again when he made a 14-footer for birdie at
the 11th and 12-footer for eagle on the next, but he was bunkered twice both on
the 15th and 16th and bogeyed each of them.
Garcia had a chance to narrow the gap to two at the 571-yard 17th, but from
just short of the green played a clumsy chip 10 feet past and in the end was
relieved to halve the hole.
Garcia's second to the 531-yard last was carving towards the trees when it hit
the line of spectators on its first bounce and came back in the clear, from
where he chipped to four feet and saved a half in birdie fours. Els was round in
65 and Garcia in 68.
Garcia became the first player all week to birdie the opening hole when he
made a 12-footer on the resumption and when he pitched to two feet at the 24th
he was only one behind.
However, his next shot was a drive into a ditch and, forced to take a penalty
drop, he lost it to a par four, Els playing a delicate chip to within inches of
the flag.
Garcia moved onto his opponent's heels again with an 18-foot birdie putt at
the 26th, but once again he followed it with an error, driving into the trees at
the next and bogeying it.
Worse was to follow for the young Spaniard when Els made a putt of nearly 40
feet for a two at the 28th - and a three-hole lead with eight to play.
There were more twists to come, but Garcia, who came from four down to beat
Michael Campbell and three down to beat Padraig Harrington, could not do it
again.