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Oliver Wilson was once again left
wondering when he will claim his first
victory as a professional after the
HSBC Champions trophy was snatched
from underneath his nose by Sergio
Garcia at the second extra hole of
a play-off in Shanghai yesterday.
While a win cannot be too far away
for Wilson, a player who has grown
visibly in the past 12 months, Garcia
has an altogether different proposition
to consider. Namely, can he overtake
Tiger Woods as the world No 1 following
a result that moved him above Phil
Mickelson and into second place in
the world rankings? And that despite
the fact that he has yet to win a
major championship.
Wilson, who had led Garcia by one
stroke as he came to the 18th tee
at the Sheshan International Golf
Club, was taken into a play-off for
the £507,000 first prize after
the Spaniard, playing in the group
ahead, produced a birdie just when
he needed it most to put the pressure
on his English Ryder Cup team-mate.
In the event, Wilson did well to sink
a difficult par putt to guarantee
the play-off and considered himself
unlucky when his birdie putt at the
second extra hole grazed the cup but
stayed above ground. He had already
had a 15-foot putt for a victory that
came up short the first time around,
but Garcia was not about to give him
another chance, sinking his own birdie
putt of around 12 feet from the fringe
of the green to claim his nineteenth
win worldwide and his eighth on the
European Tour.
Wilson, a 28-year-old son of Mansfield,
has now finished second eight times
since he joined the tour in 2005,
five of them this year alone. This
was his second defeat in a play-off
in 2008 - the first was to Miguel
Angel Jimenez, at the BMW PGA Championship
at Wentworth, the tour's flagship
event - and his fourth in total. He
made history this year by becoming
the first player to play in a Ryder
Cup match having yet to win, but he
looked anything but out of place.
After moving to around No 42 in the
world rankings, he should also have
guaranteed a debut at the Masters
in 2009.
A victory, as Garcia was quick to
point out, should be a racing certainty.
And when it comes, as it surely must,
then watch him go. "I'm getting
to the stage where second is not good
enough," Wilson said. "There
was a time when I was pleased to be
finishing there, but that's gone.
It's about time I took my chance."
In the meantime, Garcia was left fielding
questions about where he goes from
here. His first task, he said, was
to win a major championship and then
to challenge for the top spot in the
world. With Woods still recuperating
from a serious knee operation, the
No 1 spot could be up for grabs around
the time of the Masters if he does
not play between the new year and
April, which looks increasingly unlikely.
Among the others chasing him are Padraig
Harrington, Mickelson (who finished
tied eighth here) and Vijay Singh.
Garcia, meanwhile, was not foolish
enough to suggest that Woods was there
for the taking. "You've got to
realise that when we talk about Tiger,
we're looking at the kind of player
that you don't see very often in history,"
he said. "There's very few like
him, if there's ever been one like
him.
"Attacking No 1 probably depends
a little bit on how much [time] he
takes off and if I keep playing well.
It's possible, mainly because he has
been injured, but we know that as
soon as he comes out, he's going to
play well and he's going to become
quite tough." On a lighter note,
and one that Garcia appreciated, he
was asked by a local journalist first
if he had plans to get married and
second, what did he intend doing with
his winnings? "I don't even have
a girlfriend, so how would I get married?,"
he joked, while casting a sideways
glance towards his girlfriend, Morgan
Norman, the daughter of Greg Norman.
Then he admitted that "marriage
is definitely something that I'm looking
forward to in the future. I'm very
happy and very fortunate to be dating
a great girl at the moment. I guess
it's happy days for me." And
on the subject of the prize money?
"I'm just going to try to put
it in a bank that doesn't go bankrupt,"
he said before being gently reminded
that it was HSBC's money that he was
pocketing.
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