Whipping winds and heavy downpours stops tourney
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Greg Risling
A chain of storms pummeled Southern California over the weekend leaving
storm drains clogged, downing trees and forcing the closure of a major
golf tournament in Newport Beach.
Officials called off the final round of the Toshiba Senior Classic on
Sunday when whipping winds and heavy downpours stopped golfers from
making any approach to the Newport Beach Country Club course.
“The golf course was totally unplayable,” said Bruce Sudderth, Senior PGA
Tour official.
The tournament finish was a vast disappointment compared to the past
three years where the final round usually provided the tournament’s best
moments. Last year, Gary McCord won a dramatic, five-hole playoff edging
friend John Jacobs.
Golfers weren’t the only ones left out in the cold. Newport-Mesa
residents were soaked first from a storm that brought booming
thunderstorms and lightening Friday night. They barely had a chance to
recover before another system slammed into the area on Sunday.
More than an inch fell on Sunday accompanied by winds up to 35 knots. The
wind inflicted the most damage, knocking down signs and trees.
Irene Rice heard a spine-jarring crash on Sunday morning while she was
cleaning her Corona del Mar home. A 25-foot pine tree came tumbling down
onto her neighbor’s home on Heliotrope Drive. No one was inside the home
when the tree fell, but it startled Rice.
“I thought a car crashed into my house,” she said. “It was such a loud
bang. It shook my house so bad, every picture in my home was askew.”
About 1 1/2 inches of rain was reported at John Wayne Airport over the
weekend, according to the National Weather Service. Just two months ago,
people were talking drought. Now, the rain totals are looking more
feasible and inching their way to average levels.
Not everyone is happy about the timeliness of the storms. The month of
March usually means a return to the beach for Orange County residents,
which translates into profits for businesses. Several stores were closed
on the tourist-friendly Balboa Island on Sunday because of the storm.
“It was bad earlier in the day when there was horizontal rain,” said
Sunnye Collins, who works as an assistant manager at a clothing store on
Marine Avenue. “Our floors had about an inch of rain. But we decided to
stay open.”
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