Toshiba Classic details were stepped up a notch
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Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - For members of the Senior PGA Tour who travel the
country and make stops at several different venues, they’re aware of
what’s good and bad in the operation of a tournament.
There are transportation issues, food and beverage services, programs
during the week for the players’ families, and, of course, a golf course
on which to play and compete for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Hospitality goes a long way in a golf tournament, and there are details
on the course few would pay much attention to, unless you were a golfer.
Following the rain-shortened, 36-hole Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport
Beach Country Club, senior tour player Jay Sigel complimented co-chairman
Jake Rohrer on the event’s noticeable improvements, such as an easier
path getting from the ninth green to the 10th tee.
In previous years, players would take the traditional route along the
cart path, going past the putting green, clubhouse and No. 1 tee box
before arriving at the 10th tee. During their trek, players sometimes
struggled avoiding foot traffic from fans and found distractions along
the way.
But, this year, tournament officials roped off an area that created a
beeline from the ninth green to the 10th tee, allowing players to make
the turn more swiftly and smoothly.
“It was very gratifying to me (Sunday) morning, when (Sigel) said he
really noticed the improvements,” said Rohrer, a longtime volunteer for
Hoag Hospital, the managing charity of the senior tour event.
“(Sigel) also said he noticed the increased corporate and community
support, and improved hospitality. He said the tournament gets better
each year, and said, ‘I’ll be back.’ Jay, of course, is also a
businessman and understands what’s going on.
“But it was nice of him to notice. (The players) are careful about
(tipping their cap to tournament officials). They want all the
tournaments to do well.”
Rohrer also mentioned that players were excited about the senior-tour
record $1-million donation to charity.
Howard Twitty missed finishing in a tie at six-under 136 with champion
Allen Doyle by less than an inch, when his 15-foot putt from the fringe
at 18 in the second round didn’t fall.
Had Twitty made his birdie attempt, there would have been a playoff
Sunday between him and Doyle for the Toshiba title on one of the
par-three holes.
Trailing Doyle by one stroke as he got to the 18th hole Saturday, Twitty
said it was in the back of his mind that he needed a birdie if the final
round was canceled (which it was).
“I hit a real good putt on 18,” Twitty said. “It had a good chance. When
you see it raining, you think you might still have a chance, but the
course was pretty wet (Sunday).”
Twitty’s putt burned the right edge of the cup as it slid past. One inch,
perhaps, cost him a shot at a playoff.
“It was a lot less than an inch,” said Twitty, who settled for a
second-place tie and earned $104,000, his highest finish in two years on
the senior tour.
Even though Arnold Palmer can’t play like he once did, the 70-year-old
legend was the highlight of Toshiba Senior Classic 2000 for this
reporter.
Following him around on the golf course, watching his famous squint and
enjoying a relaxed conversation with him Thursday in the quiet,
uninterrupted environment of the locker room lounge was unforgettable.
Doyle, who won his first senior tour event of 2000 and his fifth career
title (he won four last year as a rookie), made some interesting comments
Sunday about, among others, Lanny Wadkins, one of the circuit’s marquee
rookies.
Wadkins, who shot seven-over-par 78 in the first round to take himself
out of contention, finished tied for 59th at 148, after recovering in the
second round with a one-under 70.
There were 13 super seniors (60-and-over) who finished ahead of Wadkins,
a winner of 21 PGA Tour titles, including the 1977 PGA Championship.
“I don’t mind laying back and not being in the limelight,” Doyle said,
after he was declared the winner of the sixth annual Toshiba Classic,
which earned him $195,000.
“Other guys get asked why they’re not playing better after a round, and
guys get asked when they’re going to win again. But I don’t get asked
that much. They (press members) are not worried about me.
“They’ll ask Tom Kite when he’s going to win, and they’ll ask Tom Watson
(who won his second start on the senior tour last September) when he’s
going to win again, and, by about April, they’ll start asking Lanny
Wadkins why he’s playing so poorly.”
You might have noticed Dave Stockton with a new look last week ... on top
of his head. For years, you could almost identify Stockton with his
Founders Club cap, but the company went out of business and Stockton now
wears an MFS Mutual Fund cap.
Former Masters champion Tommy Aaron, 63, finished a respectable
three-over-par 145 (tied for 36th), or one shot better than another
big-name senior tour rookie, Tom Kite.
Earlier in the week, Aaron talked about his memorable 1973 Masters title.
“For me, it was a dream come true, growing up in Georgia (near Augusta
National),” he said. “First, it was a dream come true playing in the
Masters, then it was a dream come true winning it.”
Aaron said he occasionally reflects on his Masters title and some of the
shots he made in the final round that propelled him to an unlikely green
jacket (he won only one other time on the PGA Tour).
“I started the final round four shots behind and birdied the first three
holes, and that got me right back in it,” said Aaron, who shot a
final-round 68 to rally and edge J.C. Snead by one stroke for the
championship.
“In the last few holes, there was a lot of electricity in the air, like
I’ve never felt before. You feel pressure like you’ve never felt before.
It was incredible.”
Funniest guy on the senior tour, hands down, is Larry Ziegler, the most
entertaining player in the pro-ams, before, during and after tee off.
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