Jones Cup: Flopping to the title
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Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - No matter which foursome you followed Friday
afternoon on a perfect day in Newport Beach, you witnessed golf played as
well as (or even better than) the seniors in the Toshiba Senior Classic.
Members of the Senior PGA Tour struggle on the greens at Newport Beach
Country Club just like the Great Eight experienced in the inaugural Jones
Cup, a highly competitive men’s pro-am field that exhilarated two
galleries in a better-ball gross format and ended with dramatics that
would make ESPN envious.
After python putts and chip-ins for birdie by Mesa Verde Country Club
head professional Tom Sargent and Newport Beach host and head pro Paul
Hahn, it came down to, of all things, a flop shot at the 18th green.
It was Master Sargent at the controls.
With Sargent’s ball buried deep in the right rough at 18, and a
subsequent check by rules official Jerry Anderson to see if it was
embedded and possibly stepped on by a member of the gallery, the
53-year-old Mesa Verde pro, talk about flop, pulled a rabbit out of the
hat.
Tied with Newport Beach at 1-under heading to 18, Mesa Verde needed
birdie to win, but Sargent’s second shot landed to the right of Newport
Beach’s remodeled 18th green, and, even after it bounced, lodged itself
firmly about a half-inch below the top of the thick grass.”I thought
about picking it up and moving it (for a better lie), but there were way
too many people watching,” Sargent quipped, after executing one of golf’s
toughest shots to near perfection, flopping onto the edge of the green
and rolling two feet to the flag, setting up a birdie putt as Mesa Verde
won a thriller before an estimated 300 fans.
“Actually, there was a lady sitting in a golf cart across the green,
and, before I made the shot, I had visions of (getting too much club and)
drilling her right between the eyes.”
In a do-or-die situation, Sargent turned to his caddie and son, Luke,
and offered him the 57-percent lob wedge to try himself. Sargent laughed.
Then he turned and launched a difficult shot in textbook style with all
eyes focusing on him like a real pro in a clinic.
“You open up and it’s just like a bunker shot, just with more prayer,”
added Sargent, whose miracle flop shot secured the perpetual Jones Cup
trophy for Mesa Verde, which also featured men’s club champion Pete
Daley.
Daley, who saved par for his team with a big up and down on No. 9,
helped Mesa Verde finish at 2-under 69 for a one-stroke victory over
Newport Beach, which had three birdies by Hahn and men’s club champion
Bob Kraft. NBCC made bogey on the next hole after two of its birdies.
Daley was also there for Mesa Verde on 17 coming down the stretch,
hitting the green and two-putting from 15 feet for par as Sargent was
scrambling.
“It was really a gas,” Hahn said. “I felt my competitive juices coming
back. It’s been years (since I’ve played competitively). This is not a
big tournament, but it’s competitive.”
Two strokes off the lead and finishing at even-par 71 was Santa Ana
Country Club with head pro Mike Reehl and men’s club champion Chris
Veitch, while Big Canyon Country Club ended at 1-over 72 with head pro
Kelly Manos and men’s club champion Steve Collins.
“There’s no tomorrow and no second place,” said Sargent, who hired and
groomed Manos at Yorba Linda Country Club a decade ago, giving the
34-year-old Big Canyon head pro his start in the business.
As Sargent hoisted the Jones Cup trophy, he said: “I taught Kelly
Manos everything he knows, but I didn’t teach him everything I know.”
While Sargent isn’t a regular on the Southern California PGA circuit
and rarely plays in competitive tournaments, he said it was fun to
compete and rub elbows with his Newport-Mesa community golf peers.
Before the must-see finishing hole, Sargent drained a 60-foot birdie
putt on No. 2 and a 45-footer on No. 16, which tied Newport Beach for the
Jones Cup lead in a tightly contested better-ball pro-am.
“We’re a big-play team,” Sargent said with a laugh. “We go for the
three-run home runs and 60-yard touchdowns.”
The recently wed Hahn, with a lot of local knowledge but also the
home-course pressure from members in the gallery, chipped in for birdie
from 30 feet on No. 9 and followed it up with a little dance.
Then, on 11, Hahn sank a 40-foot birdie putt and performed another
jig, this time jumping in the air with a scissors kick, then pumping his
fist once his feet touched back down on the earth.
“One of my members came up to me and said, ‘The weight of the club
rests on you today,”’ said Hahn, whose biggest moment actually came from
the hilly rough on 17, Newport Beach’s signature hole, to save par in
scrambling, yet spectacular, fashion.
Hahn was long and left off the tee at 17. Ironically, while walking up
the 16th fairway, he noticed an NBCC member on the same hill and staring
at the threatening, two-tiered green below. Hahn wanted no part of that
shot, he said to himself, but wound up there, anyhow.
“I just happen to look up and see my member over there, and he (also)
hit up close to the green,” said Hahn, who followed up his chip with a
6-foot putt for par, as Newport Beach remained tied with Mesa Verde.
Unbeknownst to Hahn, Sargent birdied 16 in the foursome behind him to
tie the score. Newport Beach teed off on 17 with a one-shot lead.
As finishes go, the inaugural Jones Cup wrote itself with a script few
could have made up. And, as a setting, featured the brand new 18th hole,
which, from the fairway bunkers, has an elevated, 5,500-square foot green
and large mounds behind it for what Anderson, the NBCC President, calls
“flash.”
Club officials said it would bring new and exciting challenges to the
18th green. Sargent proved them right.
Moreover, for Mesa Verde, the 60-year-old Daley who didn’t start
playing golf until age 41, has never taken a lesson in his life, yet now
is on top of the Newport-Mesa golf community.
Prior to the first Jones Cup, Daley had played Newport Beach only a
handful of times in his life. But Thursday, after a round at Santa Ana
Country Club, Daley teed it up for four holes at Newport Beach with
former Angels pitcher and NBCC member Jim Abbott.
For Newport Beach, Kraft made birdie on No. 6, the toughest hole on
the golf course this year for the seniors in the Toshiba Classic. Then
Kraft saved par for his team on No. 14 with a clutch, 4-foot putt to keep
Newport Beach at 1-under and still in the lead.
Santa Ana played consistent par and had its birdie chances, but missed
three birdie tries on the front nine and also settled for par on 17 and
18 after sticking it close.
“We were on edges ... if we sink a few of those, we’re right there,”
Reehl said. “We scrambled a little bit today, but it was fun.”
Veitch, a four-time Santa Ana men’s club champion, made birdie at 15,
and, throughout the entertaining round, displayed beautiful iron play.
Manos, the 1996 Southern California PGA section champion and the
youngest player in the Jones Cup by 12 years, sank a birdie at No. 3 to
put Big Canyon in a tie for the lead, then he narrowly missed a birdie
putt on No. 4. Big Canyon, however, bogeyed 5 and 8, then started the
back nine with a bogey at 10.
Collins, the five-time Big Canyon men’s champion, drained a 25-foot
birdie putt on 18 from the edge of the green.
“I think seeing the number of people here today tells how successful
the event is, or what it will become,” Manos said. “Any time you bring
the golf community together is great.”
The Jones Cup is the new men’s competition for locals only in the
Fletcher Jones Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club Championship Series, which
started the Tea Cup Classic for women in 1997. The series is designed to
bring the golf community closer together and crown a Daily Pilot
champion.
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