Garcia leads by two shots, Legion seek second team win at LIV Golf Miami

Captain Sergio Garcia of Fireballs GC shot a 4-under 68 Saturday to take the lead heading into the final round.(Scott Taetsch/LIV Golf)
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Updated 07 April 2024
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Garcia leads by two shots, Legion seek second team win at LIV Golf Miami

  • The Fireballs GC captain shot a 4-under 68 on Saturday at Trump National Doral to move to 9 under

MIAMI: Sergio Garcia has played so many competitive rounds on the Blue Monster during his legendary career that there are no longer any surprises. He hopes that experience will pay off Sunday with his first win on the iconic course — and his first win in the LIV Golf League.

The Fireballs GC captain shot a 4-under 68 Saturday at LIV Golf Miami to move to 9 under, good enough for a two-stroke lead going into the final round at Trump National Doral. His closest pursuers are Smash GC’s Talor Gooch, Legion XIII’s Tyrrell Hatton, RangeGoats GC’s Matthew Wolff and Stinger GC’s Dean Burmester.

Legion XIII tops the team leaderboard at 21 under thanks to Kieran Vincent’s 66, Hatton’s 67 and Jon Rahm’s 70. They lead the RangeGoats by three shots while seeking their second win of their inaugural season as a LIV Golf expansion team.

Having been involved in two LIV Golf individual playoffs that didn’t go his way — including the epic into-the-darkness four-hole battle again Joaquin Niemann in this year’s season opener at Mayakoba — Garcia would love to avoid extra holes on Sunday and wrap up the tournament in regulation.

“At the end of the day, you’ve just got to keep giving yourself chances,” said Garcia, who has 36 career professional wins, the last one in 2020. “I’m trying my hardest out there every time. I’m trying my best. Sometimes my best is really good, sometimes my best is not quite as good. Hopefully tomorrow, my best will be really good, and we’ll be able to get it done. If not, we’ll just keep working at it.”

Garcia made his first professional start at Doral in 2002 and has a couple of third-place finishes to show for it. His bogey-free 67 on Friday matched his lowest score on the Blue Monster, and he followed it with a Saturday performance that started with an approach shot that banged off the flagstick on his opening hole and included his only bogey of the tournament on his 29th hole played.

“Guess we’ve seen it throughout all these years, so we know a little bit more or less what to expect,” Garcia said. “But it’s the kind of golf course that you have to hit good shots. If you don’t, it’s tough.”

Garcia is not alone in seeking his first LIV Golf victory.

Of the top 12 players on the leaderboard, the only one who has lifted a LIV Golf individual trophy is Gooch, who won three times last year en route to claiming the season-long Individual Championship.

He doubts that gives him any kind of edge over the other contenders on Sunday — “I haven’t looked at the leaderboard, but I’m betting a few of those dudes have won major championships and Ryder Cups,” he said — but he does have confidence in his ability to successfully navigate a tense and compact final-round leaderboard.

“It’s nice to have won that much recently,” said Gooch, who is seeking his first LIV Golf win on American soil after all three wins last year overseas. “That’s confidence-boosting for sure.”

Like Garcia, Burmester and Wolff have sniffed around the leaderboard a couple of times since joining LIV Golf. Both are among the league’s biggest hitters, so it’s no surprise they’re in contention on a course that measures 7,701 yards. Neither player had seen the course until they joined LIV Golf.

“It’s not called the Blue Monster for nothing,” Burmester said. “It’s tough. There’s not one golf shot you stand there and think, man, I’ve actually got a chance.”

Wolff finished fourth earlier this year in Las Vegas in just his second start after RangeGoats’ captain, Bubba Watson, acquired him in a trade for Gooch. Now he’s in Sunday’s final group with Gooch and trying to catch Garcia.

“Winning is really hard to do,” Wolff said. “Anytime you have the opportunity to be in contention or win is definitely something to be proud of.”

Team scores

Standings and counting scores for Saturday’s second round of the team competition at LIV Golf Miami. The three best scores from each team count in the first two rounds while all four scores count in the final round. The team with the lowest cumulative score after three rounds wins the team title.

1. LEGION XIII -21 (Vincent 66, Hatton 67, Rahm 70; Rd. 2 score: -13)

2. RANGEGOATS GC -18 (Pieters 69, Wolff 69, Uihlein 73; Rd. 2 score: -5)

3. STINGER GC -13 (Oosthuizen 68, Burmester 69, Grace 71; Rd. 2 score: -8)

4. CLEEKS GC -12 (Meronk 66, Bland 67, Samooja 73; Rd. 2 score: -10)

5. FIREBALLS GC -10 (Garcia 68, Ancer 69, Chacarra 72; Rd. 2 score: -7)

T6. TORQUE GC -9 (Niemann 69, Ortiz 69, Pereira 71; Rd. 2 score: -7)

T6. 4ACES GC -9 (Reed 69, Johnson 71, Varner 74; Rd. 2 score: -2)

T8. CRUSHERS GC -7 (Lahiri 70, DeChambeau 70, Casey 71; Rd. 2 score: -5)

T8. SMASH GC -7 (Gooch 70, Kokrak 72 McDowell 73; Rd. 2 score: -1)

T10. HYFLYERS GC E (Tringale 70, Mickelson 72, Steele 72; Rd. 2 score: -2)

T10. RIPPER GC E (Leishman 69, Campbell 71, Jones 75; Rd. 2 score -1)

T10. IRONHEADS GC E (Na 72, Lee 72, Vincent 74; Rd. 2 score: +2)

13. MAJESTICKS GC +4 (Stenson 71, Horsfield 71, Poulter 74; Rd. 2 score: E)


Lee, Hellgren, Kim secure 2026 LIV Golf wild cards

Updated 9 sec ago
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Lee, Hellgren, Kim secure 2026 LIV Golf wild cards

  • Canada’s Richard T. Lee claims victory at Black Diamond Ranch in Florida

LECANTO: A dominant performance by Richard T. Lee of Canada. A clutch low round for Sweden’s Bjorn Hellgren. And an inspirational return for American Anthony Kim.

All three players had reason to celebrate at Black Diamond Ranch on Sunday afternoon after securing the three wild card spots available through this week’s LIV Golf Promotions. The trio joins International Series qualifiers Scott Vincent and Yosuke Asaji as the five wild cards who will compete in the 13 regular season tournaments during the 2026 LIV Golf League season, which opens in Riyadh on Feb. 4-7.

While Lee and Hellgren will make their LIV Golf debuts in Saudi Arabia, Kim returns for his third season as a wild card player. He came out of a 12-year retirement from professional golf to join LIV Golf in 2024 but was relegated after last season. Earning a spot for 2026 reflects the considerable progress he has made in recent months.

“There were definitely low moments throughout those two years,” Kim said. “But I believe in myself more than anybody else believes in me, and I think that’s all that matters. I felt like I would earn my spot back if I did get relegated, which I did. I felt like if I just kept my foot on the gas and just kept grinding that great things were going to happen.”

Lee, meanwhile, completed an impressive weeklong effort with a final-round 5-under 65, leaving him at 11 under for the 36-hole weekend shootout for a five-shot victory over Hellgren, his nearest competitor.

The 35-year-old becomes the first Canadian to earn a spot on LIV Golf and he did it in style, shooting rounds of 64, 66, 64 and 65 over the four days, including the first two 18-hole knockout rounds that whittled the initial field of 78 players down to the 22 competing this weekend.

“It’s not sunk in yet, to be honest,” said Lee, who suffered just two bogeys all week, one of those coming late on Sunday when he already had a spot wrapped up. “Twenty-one under on this course is absolutely amazing. I’m very pleased with my game right now.”

Hellgren shot an even-par 70 on Saturday, leaving him outside the top 10 on Sunday. The 35-year-old, who won the Saudi Open presented by PIF last month, had to play aggressively to make up strokes.

He opened with consecutive birdies and overcame a couple of bogeys midway through his round, finishing it off with four birdies in his final six holes to shoot a 6-under 64, matching the course record set by Lee earlier in the week.

“Starting the day, we knew what we had to do,” Hellgren said. “We had to shoot a low one today. We had to basically go all in.”

Kim was in better shape to start the day, in the primary chase pack after shooting a 66 on Saturday. Through 10 holes on Sunday, he was even par for the day and in a three-way tie for the third and final spot with two Thailand golfers, Jazz Janewattananond and Sarit Suwannarut.

Kim then birdied the par-4 11th with a 20-foot putt to create separation, then battled hard to maintain it. The par-4 14th was a key moment, as he twice overcame tricky lies near bunkers, eventually saving par with a 15-foot putt. By the time he reached the 18th hole, he was three shots clear of fourth place and could afford a final bogey.

“Felt like if I made that putt, it could really swing the momentum,” Kim said of the 14th. “I beared down and holed it.”

Lee and Hellgren are both looking forward to the step up in competition with LIV Golf, with a field that includes champions such as Bryson DeChambeau, Jon Rahm, Dustin Johnson, Phil Mickelson and others.

“Definitely have to hit it longer to keep up with those guys and maybe get my short game a little bit sharper,” Lee said.

“Obviously this is going to change our life, for my family,” Hellgren added. “But it’s still just a tournament, and I’m sure I’ll be going to Riyadh to try to win because I like the feeling of winning.”

Kim, meanwhile, is glad just to have another season on LIV Golf. Sunday’s outcome was arguably the biggest moment of his two-year return to the sport.

“There’s a ton of satisfaction,” Kim said at the end of his press conference. “I’m sure I’ll understand that all that work has really shown this week, maybe later tonight when I’m drinking an iced tea. It means a lot to me because three years ago, doctors told me that I potentially had two weeks to live. So just to be here standing in front of you guys is a blessing.”