Tuesday, January 06, 2009
ONE WINS -- THE OTHER DOESN'T
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Posted by: Richard Lees 9/10/2008 9:49 AM

 

ONE WINS -- THE OTHER DOESN'T

 
When Camillo Villegas started smelling the finish line in his first Tour victory at the BMW last weekend, it was interesting to note that his demeanor sharpened and elevated and, in fact, turned inward with intensity.
 
When Sergio Garcia has gotten close, his reactions have been very different: he starts looking up at the sky, at his clubs, at spike marks on greens, at the long grass of the rough he suddenly finds himself stuck in.
 
When questioned after rounds, Camillo talks of how he's worked, his eyes narrow, and you can see he's leaning on the strength of his workouts, the detail of his routines, the method he's found to focus on his game.
 
When Sergio is questioned, he talks of himself in the second person, saying things like, "you give it your best shot, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't," or "you hit good putts, but sometimes they don't fall."
 
On 18 at the BMW, Camillo's eyes widened on the tee, he reared back, and did the opposite of what Johnny Miller was calling for "on the air" -- he hit an aggressive power fade aimed and executed to carry a bunker 290 yards out on the left side of the fairway.
 
And then when he tapped in for his first victory, he simply closed his eyes, looked inside himself, said yes to all the work he knew went into the moment, and clenched his fist in silent validation.
 
At Carnoustie, or any number of other close calls, when Sergio doesn't get there, he looks up at the sky, or at his putter, or his opponent.
 
One looks inward, at himself -- and wins.
 

The other doesn’t.

 

Copyright ©2008 Richard Lees
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Comments (1)  
Re: ONE WINS -- THE OTHER DOESN'T    By scott@lostball.com on 9/12/2008 1:01 PM
Great observation here, Richard. Clearly Sergio -- as a metaphor for us all -- have the skills to accomplish what we seek to accomplish. Unfortunately, and as Fred Shoemaker talks of, the noise gets between what we are capable of doing and what we actually do. For Sergio, and again, like all of us, experience of a negative track record only increases the volume of the noise and the level of difficulty it takes to silence it. I'm reminded of mathematics Probability 101 -- everytime you roll the dice, the results have zero, zip, nada to do with the previous roll. Yet in our basic human minds, we have grave difficulty realizing this and accepting the principle. In golf, just because we lost the tournament last week doesn't mean we'll necessarily win or lose it this week. But we play little baby games with ourselves with words like momentum and confidence in a forced effort to equate past experience with present or future results. IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE THIS WAY but for the collective Sergio in all of us, boy is it hard to break this pattern of thought...

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