Golf: No surprise in Sweet-60 Colbert winning one week after
Toshiba Classic
Richard Dunn
It was late Monday afternoon, the first day of player practice
rounds for the Toshiba Senior Classic in Newport Beach.
Earlier, because of unplayable conditions due to rain, Senior PGA Tour
official Skip Whittet canceled the practice rounds, but the visiting
golfers could use the practice putting greens, which is where Jim Colbert
was spotted.
Like many of the players in the field, Colbert arrived on a charter
flight late Sunday night from Mexico, where Mike McCullough won his first
Senior Tour event at Las Vista in Puebla.
Colbert, though, had the lead with two holes remaining in the final
round at the Mexico Senior Classic, but missed short putts on 17 and 18
as McCullough won coming through the backdoor.
When Colbert was found all alone on a barren putting green late the
next afternoon at Newport Beach Country Club, after most of his peers had
called it a day (or never made it at all), he was still in a bitter mood.
Still kicking himself over those missed putts, including one from 2 1/2
feet.
Making those two easy putts would have secured the victory for
Colbert, who has been trying hard to enter golf’s pantheon of winning a
tournament in five decades (PGA Tour and Senior PGA Tour).
Colbert, working on his putting stroke under dark clouds, was sort of
dressed in disguise. With a new goatee, and without his customary floppy
hat and hairpiece, he didn’t exactly look like the same Colbert who won
the 1996 Toshiba Classic.
But he certainly showed up with a familiar attitude.
“What I want is to be the best 59- 60-year-old player that’s ever
played,” Colbert said. “I shot 62 (in the second round at the Mexico
Senior Classic). I almost shot my age. I’ll be 60 soon, but I don’t feel
60. I’d like to be like Sam Snead. He was awfully good at 59 and 60.”
Colbert didn’t get his trip to the winner’s circle in a fifth
different decade at Newport Beach, but he made his short putts, shot
67-71-70--208 and tied for 12th.
In a way, it was Colbert’s tuneup for his victory last Sunday in the
SBC Senior Classic at Valencia Country Club, two days after his 60th
birthday.
You knew the old Jim Colbert was back the moment you ran into him at
the Toshiba Classic and that it would only be a matter of time before he
won again.
For Colbert, who hadn’t won on the senior circuit since the 1998
Transamerica, he certainly didn’t waste any time.
Hoag Heart Institute, Orange County’s highest-volume, highest-rated
cardiovascular program, is spearheading the delivery of life-saving
technology to Orange County golf courses.
In February, as part of Hoag Heart Month, the institute partnered with
Medtronic USA, Inc., to donate 10 automated external defibrillators
(AEDs) to both public and private golf courses.
During the week of the Toshiba Classic, an AED was donated to Newport
Beach Country Club, one of three local clubs receiving the portable,
easy-to-use system, which is designed to restore a normal heart rhythm in
victims of sudden cardiac arrest, a condition that kills 220,000
Americans a year.
Pelican Hill Golf Club and Newport Beach Golf Course, both public
courses, also received an AED, valued at $3,500, and free training for
all staff members, worth $500 to $800.
It’s a scary thing when a golfer suffers from cardiac arrest on the
golf course, a long way from communicating with the outside world unless
a cell phone is readily available.
“Placing AEDs in public places has been shown to dramatically increase
the chance of survival for victims of these sudden-death episodes,” Hoag
Heart Institute Medical Director Dr. Joel Manchester said. “Hoag believes
so strongly in the benefits of AEDs that we are taking the lead in
deploying them throughout our community.”
AEDs were created for use by non-medical personnel who have undergone
basic training
Timothy Jenson of Newport Beach and Zachary Rabinovich of Newport
Coast placed in the top 10 in their divisions last weekend at the Junior
Amateur Golf Scholars Tournament at Shandin Hills Golf Club in San
Bernardino.
Jenson, 16, finished eighth in the boys 15-18 age group, while
Rabinovich, 14, ended 10th in the 13-14 age group.
Junior Amateur Golf Scholars is a year-round junior golf tour offering
monthly two-day events for juniors 13-18 in Southern California. Details:
(714) 952-3316.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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