Golf: Super seniors
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Richard Dunn
The beauty of golf is that it doesn’t always pay attention to
Father Time. Golf goes by its own time clock. It’s a pitching wedge and
driver instead of a scythe and an hourglass.
When your game improves as you turn 35, 45 and even 55, you begin to
realize why golf doesn’t have an old-timers’ game. You don’t see players
in other sports doing quite as well at their craft as age creeps up.
As golfers in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa embrace the inaugural Jones
Cup, it can be gratifying to know that this year’s participants aren’t
exactly young bucks.
The Jones Cup is a men’s pro-am to be played July 28 at Newport Beach
Country Club in a two-man, better-ball gross format, with the four
private clubs in this newspaper’s circulation vying for community
bragging rights and a magnificent perpetual Jones Cup trophy, while
amateurs gain instant fame and head professionals are put under the
spotlight.
Perhaps the biggest surprise in learning about the four amateurs is
that two of them are over 60, which means they’d qualify for the PGA
Tour’s Super Seniors.
Newport Beach Country Club men’s club champion Bob Kraft, who will tee
it up with head pro Paul Hahn, is 61. Mesa Verde Country Club men’s club
champion Pete Daley, who will partner with head pro Tom Sargent, is 60.
They are not senior club champions, mind you, but overall, stand-alone
champions. They make Big Canyon Country Club’s Steve Collins, 48, and
Santa Ana Country Club’s Chris Veitch, 46, seem like kids.
“I’m just a late bloomer,” said Daley, who won Mesa Verde’s senior
club championship in 1997, then captured his first club title at age 58
in 1998, before repeating as club champion in ’99.
In November, Daley had an artificial, six-hole putting green built in
the backyard of his home in Newport Beach. “But I can’t say it has
(necessarily) helped my game,” Daley quipped.
Newport Beach might have members who drive longer, putt more
consistently and score lower, but Kraft will always hang around and be
there at the end.
“(Kraft) outplayed everybody this year (in the Newport Beach men’s
club championship in May),” Hahn said. “Bobby’s a gutsy player, and he
knows how to get the ball in the hole. He’s a steady golfer. He’s not a
birdie machine, but he’s always there.”
Veitch, Santa Ana’s four-time club champion who will play with head
pro Mike Reehl in the Jones Cup, was also a late bloomer
After barely making the high school golf team his senior year, Veitch
attended USC and saw Craig Stadler and Scott Simpson and realized college
golf should probably not be in his plans.
“It’s a weird deal,” said Veitch, a Balboa Peninsula resident and
Newport Beach city amateur champion in 1998 and ’99. “I started playing
when I was 15, and I was better at age 25 than 15. Then I was better at
age 35 than 25, and I’m probably better at age (46) than 35.”
The baby in the inaugural group, Veitch has never carried a handicap
index of higher than 3 for the last 20 years. He said experience and
consistency have been the keys to his success.
Collins, who grew up playing South Hills Country Club in West Covina,
has played since age 11.
“It should be fun,” Veitch said of the Jones Cup. “I think the team
favorites are Kelly and Steve Collins from Big Canyon, because both are
very strong players.”
Of the four head pros, all are excellent golfers and have performed
well in competition, including the televised Subaru Team Championship
Matches.
“I think 7- or 8-under will win it,” said Hahn, predicting a score
that would easily sit atop the leaderboard at the Toshiba Senior Classic,
hosted by Newport Beach every March.
The Jones Cup, billed as the ultimate community pro-am, is the brand
new men’s competition in the Fletcher Jones Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club
Championship Series, which launched the Tea Cup Classic for women in
1997. Tee time is 1 p.m.
The Jones Cup is named after the only benefactor the series has had,
and includes a pro-am team from each. Players are selected by their
respective clubs.
The day of the pro-am, names of the clubs will be drawn out of a hat
before tee time to determine which two clubs will play in a foursome.
Newport Beach Country Club President Jerry Anderson will serve as the
rules official.
Furthermore, and similar to the popular Tea Cup Classic, the Jones Cup
will have hole-in-one prizes on all par-3s, including a 2000 Mercedes
Benz ML320, a sports utility vehicle reportedly valued at $40,195.
The Jones Cup will also be the first tournament outside of the NBCC
auspices to play the remodeled 18th green, which reopened to its members
Tuesday.
It will take place two weeks prior to the fourth annual Tea Cup
Classic, hosted by Big Canyon Country Club on Aug. 11.
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