Bill Haas returns with a heavy heart after friend's crash death
The deep bruise on his left leg and the soreness in his right ankle have subsided. Still tender are memories of a friend, Mark Gibello, who was killed on 13 February a winding road outside Riviera Country Club in Los Angeles when his Ferrari clipped another car and slammed into a pole. Haas was the passenger.
“There’s not many templates to go by on something like this,” Haas said in his first interview since the accident.
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Hide Ad“I was in a state of shock, disbelief. It was a tragic event, traumatic. I’m still unsure how to handle it. I keep going back to focusing on the Gibello family.”
He described the Gibellos as mutual friends he planned to stay with during the Genesis Open. Haas and Gibello played golf the previous weekend at Los Angeles Country Club, where Gibello was a member and played a role in the club hosting the Walker Cup last year. Gibello was a close friend of Bill Harmon, the swing coach who works with Haas.
“It didn’t take me long to realise how much his family loved him, how nice he was to me and my family,” Haas said.
His wife, Julie, has kept in touch with Gibello’s wife. The funeral service in California was last Friday, the same day the final field was set for the Valspar Championship in Florida. Tiger Woods is playing for the first time. So is Rory McIlroy. That should deflect plenty of attention from Haas trying to get back to work.
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Hide AdThe 35-year-old returns with a greater appreciation of life and a level of support he never realised he had. His golf bag remained in the Riviera locker room for the rest of the Genesis Open until it was shipped home to him in South Carolina. Haas hasn’t practised much. He played on Sunday in Greenville and planned to leave Monday night for the Valspar Championship in Palm Harbor, Florida.
“The amount of love and support and outreach I got from my peers and friends has been amazing,” he said. “At the same time, a friend of mine is not here anymore... There’s just no real way to explain life, why it happens and how it happens. You can’t take tomorrow for granted. You have to enjoy today and prepare for tomorrow. All that said, I still feel like I have to go compete. I can’t just say golf doesn’t matter. That’s what I do. I think that’s what Mark would want. He was a golf fan. He loved golf. He would want me to care about how I play.”
Haas has not responded to all of the phone calls and text messages because of the sheer volume, but he looks forward to being back out again among his golfing family. Along with leaning on his wife and his family, the six-time PGA Tour winner has spent time with a therapist to cope with the wide range of emotions and the lingering questions.
“I don’t know that I won’t have recurring images and thoughts and feelings about that night,” he said. “Why was he taken and I wasn’t? I ask, ‘Why?’ all the time. From the people who have reached out to me and the advice I’ve been given, you can’t ask, ‘Why?’ in life. Life happens in ways you can’t explain. There’s no point in asking. It won’t solve anything, and it only brings more questions.”
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Hide AdHe doesn’t know what to expect at Innisbrook, only that he wants to focus on golf as much as he can. “Once I get inside the ropes, I think there will be a sense of relief,” he said. “It’s what I know best, to be competitive.
What makes him most anxious about his return is the reception he might get from friends and from fans. “This needs to not be about me,” he said. “This has got to be about golf and the Gibello family.”