Toshiba Senior Classic: Littler, 69, shooting his age
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Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Nicknamed “the machine” because of his smooth tempo
swinging a golf club, veteran Gene Littler is no young buck on the Senior
PGA Tour.
But Littler, a former U.S. Open champion who will turn 70 on July 21, is
shooting his age on the golf course.
The second-oldest player in the field for the sixth annual Toshiba Senior
Classic at Newport Beach Country Club, behind only 70-year-old legend
Arnold Palmer, Littler is coming on strong in 2000.
In the season-opening Royal Caribbean Classic at Key Biscayne, Fla.,
Littler shot a first-round 69, and, although he’s almost 10 years older
than some golfers on the 60-and-over Super Seniors and 20 years beyond
the rookies on the senior tour, he finished tied for 25th in the overall
field, earning $10,257.
“Theoretically, I guess it should get easier (to shoot your age) as you
get older,” Littler said with a warm laugh. “It’s fun to do. And right
now I’m healthy.”
Littler, who won the U.S. Amateur in 1953, a year before Palmer, has
suffered through a series of physical problems in his career, including a
four-year period in his 60s in which he underwent eight surgeries for
various ailments.
“Shoulders, knees, arms -- you name it,” Littler said, “and it’s hard to
come back in your 60s.”
Littler’s last surgery was three years ago on his right rotator cuff,
which was extremely difficult to recover from, and, trying to compensate
for pain often forces a player into bad habits with the golf swing.
“Sometimes, you don’t even know where you are because (the pain) is so
great,” said Littler, who won 29 titles on the PGA Tour, including the
1961 U.S. Open at Oakland Hills Country Club by one stroke.
Littler has played every year at the Toshiba Classic, including the
inaugural at Mesa Verde Country Club in 1995. His best finish came in
1996, when he fired a three-under-par 68 in the final round to end the
tournament at one-under 212 and win $10,500.
“It’s a challenge trying to get better. I know I’m not going to get
better than I was at age 25, but I’ve gotten better the last couple of
years,” said Littler, who, at 68 and oldest player in last year’s Toshiba
field, shot a respectable 72-73-74 to finish at six-over.
Littler, who lives in Rancho Santa Fe, about an hour away from Newport
Beach, said he plans to play in all 18 Georgia-Pacific Super Senior
events in 2000.
“I just keep playing, basically because I have nothing else to do,” said
Littler, who is married with two grown children and one grandchild. “It’s
always a challenge to try to get better, no matter what stage you’re at,
and I feel like I can always play better.”
Littler, who enjoys classic automobiles, has eight Senior PGA Tour titles
in his career and still holds the senior tour record for the lowest
nine-hole score, an eight-under-par 28. He has also won 15 Super Senior
events in his career.
A member of the PGA Hall of Fame and World Golf Hall of Fame, Littler
came close to two other major championships in his career. In 1977, he
lost in a playoff to Lanny Wadkins in the PGA Championship, and he fell
to Billy Casper in an 18-hole playoff at the 1970 Masters, the last
18-hole playoff at Augusta National.
In addition to his injuries as a super senior, Little underwent surgery
for cancer of the lymph system in the spring of 1972 and miraculously
returned that same season in the fall.
Toshiba Senior Classic tournament director Jeff Purser said Tuesday
“we’re absolutely certain that we’re going to set the record on the
senior tour” for a one-year donation to charity.
The current standard is $938,000, raised last year by the Coldwell Banker
Burnet Classic, played at Bunker Hills Golf Club in Coon Rapids, Minn.,
outside Minneapolis.
“One year, the Bell Atlantic raised $1 million, but they had someone
match their funds,” Purser said. “They never made that much from the
event, so it doesn’t count.”
Organizers of the Coldwell Banker Burnet Classic have been intact for 10
years, Purser added, while this is only the third year that Hoag Hospital
is the operating charity.
“We’re not only out to break the overall record (for charitable giving in
one year), we’re going to destroy it,” said Hank Adler, Toshiba Senior
Classic co-chairman.
Purser said if this week’s weather holds up and the event “gets a big
gate,” there will be at least $1 million donated to charity.
The event has raised over $1.5 million to charity, mainly Hoag Hospital,
in the first two years.
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