Garcia revels in 'special' Masters win on Seve landmark
Sergio Garcia reflected on a "special" Masters victory on the day his idol Seve Ballesteros would have turned 60, after defeating Justin Rose in a dramatic Augusta play-off.
Following a final round that will go down in Masters folklore, it was Garcia who triumphed against his Ryder Cup team-mate to finally remove himself from the conversation regarding the best players without a major title.
Prior to his play-off success, Garcia had missed a five-foot putt for the title in regulation play.
But it ultimately mattered not and Garcia was able to speak about what it meant to join fellow Spaniards Ballesteros and Jose Maria Olazabal in winning the Masters.
"It's amazing, to do it on his [Ballesteros'] 60th birthday and to join him and Olazabal, my two idols in golf my whole life. It's something amazing," said Garcia ahead of receiving his green jacket in Augusta's Butler Cabin.
"Jose sent me a text on Wednesday night telling me how much he believed in me and what I needed to do, and just pretty much believe in myself and to be calm and not let things get to me like I have in the past.
"Everyone has been great, my family, my fiancee, my parents, her parents, it's great support."
The wait is over. #TheMasters pic.twitter.com/nltfUXoJ28
— The European Tour (@EuropeanTour) April 10, 2017
Despite their battle for supremacy creating plenty of tension on an enthralling day, Garcia and Rose were regularly seen embracing and praising one another for good play.
And Garcia said he has nothing but respect for his friend and rival.
"I think at the end of the day we're all trying to win, but we're all people and we have to represent our game," he added.
"We're good friends so we're very respectful of one another, cheering each other on. We wanted to beat the other guy, not the other one to lose it."
Garcia has been critical of Augusta in the past and, following an all-too-familiar collapse after the third round in 2012, stated he would never win a major, before later expressing regret at those comments.
"I have seen [myself winning] it several times. When I came here in 1999 as an amateur, I felt like this golf course was probably going to give me at least one major," he said.
"I won't lie, that thought changed. I became uncomfortable with the course. But I made peace with it, I accepted what Augusta gives and takes."