You might not believe this -- and Tiger Woods probably never did -- but 10 years ago, we couldn't be sure whether Woods or Sergio Garcia would become the better golfer.
Ten years ago, Tiger and Sergio dueled down the stretch at the PGA Championship at Medinah. Tiger was 23 and, for all his marketing success, had won only one major, the 1997 Masters.
Sergio was 19, brash, enormously talented and perhaps just as charismatic as Woods.
At Medinah, while Woods gritted his teeth, Garcia made the most flamboyant shot of the tournament. With his ball nestled against the root of a huge oak tree on the right side of the 16th fairway on Sunday, Garcia took a 6-iron and, facing the possibility of breaking every bone in his hands, closed his eyes at impact and ripped an otherwordly fade to the left side of the green.
Garcia sprinted down the fairway and executed a scissor-kick leap to see where his ball landed, wrapping all of his exuberance and promise into a video clip that marked him as golf's next big thing.
Then he came down to Earth and Tiger held him off, earning the victory that propelled him into one of the greatest golf seasons of all time, winning three majors in 2000. Ten years after Medinah, the major victory total stands at Woods 14, Garcia 0.
Wednesday, between practice sessions in preparation for the PGA at Hazeltine, Garcia almost meekly acknowledged Woods' superiority. "I don't know, I mean, if you look down at the numbers, unfortunately for us, I don't think Tiger's got a rival at the moment," Garcia said. "And he's not letting down. So he keeps playing really well. And you know, to be able to win an average of five, six or seven events a year is very, very impressive. It's not like he plays 35 or 40 tournaments a year, either. It's impressive to see what he does, yeah."
To become Tiger's foil, you occasionally have to foil Tiger. While Woods has grown into an iconic champion, Garcia has let his emotions, and a few majors, get away from him.