Sergio Garcia has more important things to worry about than the points race for the US PGA Tour playoffs, like figuring out what is wrong with his game.

The Spanish star enters this week's Wyndham Championship ranked 115th in the season points chase which concludes Sunday at the $5.2-million event.

Only the top 125 players will qualify for The Barclays next week in New York, the first of three events that will trim the lineup to 30 for the season-ending Tour Championship next month in Atlanta.

With plenty of points at stake this week, the bottom 38 men on the points list are vulnerable to being bumped from the lineup. Garcia would not object if he was among them.

"I don't feel anything about it," Garcia said of the playoff chase. "I came here to improve on that but if I don't, no worry."

Garcia made an impressive showing in last year's playoffs, finishing second to eventual playoff champion Vijay Singh at The Barclays and to Colombia's Camilo Villegas at the Tour Championship.

But Garcia admitted he is unhappy about the state of his game and doesn't know what he must do to fix it.

"I'll go to the teacher. We'll see," Garcia said. "Usually bad shots. That's the way it works. Bad swings. More bad swings. If I knew, I would be playing well. So I'm trying to work on it and see if I can figure it out.

"I'm not playing well. I'm just not enjoying it. I guess it's just a matter of keep working on it and hopefully get good and see where we go from there."

Argentina's Andres Romero, in the 125th spot, is skipping the event and will likely be bumped from next week's field.

Carl Pettersson, the defending Wyndham champion from Sweden, ranks 151st on the points list and needs a solid showing to move into a playoff spot.

"It hasn't been the greatest this year, but I felt like the last couple of weeks I have played pretty solid," Pettersson said. "I feel like my game is turning around."

American Charles Warren, 124th on the points list, says making the playoffs will not make up for a rough week.

"It's not like you're going to change your game plan or hit a shot differently or anything like that," Warren said. "If I play OK this weekend and I end up at 124 and don't play great on Sunday, I'm going to wish I had played better."