Golf: One pretty picture
Richard Dunn
One week before Christmas in the millennium year, strange things
are happening: Severe and unusual weather around the nation, for sure.
Including Newport Beach.
When was the last time Southern California experienced conditions like
the Santa Ana Winds, but without the wind?
For dice-rolling television producers of the Hyundai Team Matches at
Pelican Hill Golf Club, exciting golf and perfect weather are two very
important factors over which they have zero control.
Makes you wonder? Could the Team Matches have come off any better on
television? Probably not.
And for those working the event, Mother Nature provided a stunning
sunset over Catalina Island to cap a sunny Sunday at Pelican Hill, where
temperatures reached 78 degrees with a slight ocean breeze.
As clear blue skies and a lush, green golf course covered the
television screen for the Team Matches, ABC news breaks showed pictures
of late-season tornado damage in the South and crushing blizzards in the
Midwest.
Talk about two different worlds.
We’re watching sailboats dot the ocean and Jack Nicklaus play his best
golf of 2000, while Midwestern cars are stranded on snow-covered highways
and some mobile home owners in the South are suddenly homeless.
Thus, the world can use some feel-good stories and good television,
and, for that, the entertainment dollar reached a zenith for the new
title sponsor of the event produced by Terry Jastrow and Gaylord
Entertainment, formerly Jack Nicklaus Productions.
There’s no getting around the brilliance of great December weather in
Newport Beach, especially when live television is involved.
But fans at the golf course, once again, struggled to get around.
My biggest beef is this: Many people on foot, including myself, were
confused upon reaching the main intersection of Pelican Hill’s two
courses in front of the clubhouse and down the primary walkway from the
lower patio area, which leads directly to the popular practice putting
green.
There was no signage telling people where to go. As I stood and
watched, I noticed others doing the same thing I did: Arriving at the
intersection and turning their heads like a bird in a cuckoo clock,
wondering where to go after buying a $35 ticket (I was there with a media
credential).
A shuttle service was provided to take fans from the parking lot to
the 14th hole on the Ocean North Course, but the signage wasn’t enough to
draw fans’ attention.
As fans walk up to Pelican Hill’s clubhouse, they’re seeing a lot of
things -- many for the first time -- and are easily distracted by a
beautiful Pacific Ocean and the club’s landscape and architecture.
Furthermore, golf tournaments generate a lot of moving parts (i.e.,
people walking around with headsets and walkie-talkies). There are food
and souvenir vendors. There’s valet parking, a blimp hovering in the big
blue sky. Signs are easily missed.
The intersection at issue is the club’s main artery to the practice
putting green, a favorite spot for golf fans at golf tournaments, and is
located in a popular location in front of the clubhouse with breathtaking
views of the ocean, an area that signifies the center of the two
championship resort courses.
“They need an information booth here,” a man said Saturday morning,
who, like myself, decided to start walking toward the large white
hospitality tents in the distance, a 22-minute walk one way, which
includes severe hills (watch your heart monitor!).
About halfway through my stroll to the tents, I looked over my
shoulder and noticed the man turned back. He was alone and came to watch
golf. I suppose he eventually got on the shuttle to the 14th hole, but it
was disappointing to see his reaction to the experience.
After making the rounds, I arrived back at the intersection.
“I wish they had a shuttle here to bring you over there,” said one
lady, a guest of a Hyundai employee and part of a group of seven, all of
whom were clueless about where to go or where to turn.
My argument, however, was immediately dismissed.
“Unless you went through valet parking, you had to have seen the sign
that says shuttle to the 14th hole,” tournament director Gary Pollard
said, when asked about the confusing main intersection and why there was
no tournament signage there.
OK, I missed the shuttle sign walking up. But I wasn’t looking for it,
either.
This time, I went back and checked closely. I found the sign, but only
one. It had blue lettering on a white board. The letters were too small,
the sign itself didn’t get your attention and people simply walked past
without really giving it much notice.
“The signage around here is awful,” said one food and beverage service
manager.
The bottom line: Hopefully Hyundai and ABC television will come back
to Pelican Hill for the 2001 Team Matches. There are definite logistics
to be worked out between tournament operations and the Irvine Co., which
owns the golf course and needs to allow an on-course shuttle service so
people don’t die walking the hilly course.
The intersection is only one detail, but I watched two dozen people in
less than 10 minutes Saturday bob and weave their heads once they reached
the Confusing Crossroads, where a Pelican Hill sign has arrows pointing
to the first tee of the Ocean South and Ocean North courses, but nothing
about the golf tournament.
Aside from fans’ frustrations in certain areas, it couldn’t have been
a better event with playoffs on the PGA Tour and LPGA Tour championship
matches and the Golden Bear doting over his own golf game in a Senior PGA
Tour victory with legendary Tom Watson.
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