Golf: Newport Beach Open bringing out the best in people
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Richard Dunn
Part of the beauty of the Newport Beach Open is that it reminds
some locals of the former Crosby Southern Pro-Am, later called the
Newport Classic Pro-Am.
The idea of a mini-tour event is to attract professional golfers.
Organizers of the old Crosby clambake were so adept at recruiting
players, they were later rewarded indirectly with a Senior PGA Tour
event.
While the seventh annual Newport Beach Open is still in a growth
stage, the event featured veteran pros like Fred Stamey and Ray Carrasco.
For players like Stamey, the event is ideal with a $10,000 purse,
while being played on an old-style layout at Newport Beach Country Club.
And the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, the tournament organizer,
could not have ordered better weather Monday.
“This is a first-class event. I wish there were more tournaments like
this out there for guys like me,” said 43-year-old Stamey, after
finishing tied for first place with Mike Fergin at 4-under 67, then
losing in a three-hole playoff.
While the event appears to have all the amenities for the golf pro
looking to pocket a grand or two for a day’s work over 18 holes, it is
still coming up short in the player recruitment department. Only 18
played in the pro field.
The event was also open to amateurs in the morning round with
handicaps under 12, as well as other amateurs and corporate foursomes in
the afternoon with an estimated 200 golfers participating.
Stamey’s playoff record the past year dropped to 0-3 following
Monday’s extra three holes.
Stamey, who lives in Boise, Idaho and Palm Desert in the winter, is
second on the Golden State Tour money list in 2001, but is still waiting
to capture a title in a playoff.
On the last playoff hole Monday, Stamey’s birdie attempt from 24 feet
lipped out, giving Fergin a free run with a 10-footer, which he drained
for the win.
In February, Stamey lost in a Golden State Tour playoff at Oak Valley,
and last summer at Long Beach lost in another playoff when the winner
pitched in for eagle and Stamey missed a three-foot putt for birdie.
Part of the beauty of the event is that it brings out players like
Carrasco, a Toshiba Senior Classic regular and member of the European
Senior Tour, and Stamey.
“I’m a bachelor, so I can travel all over to play golf,” Stamey said.
“From May to September, I become a nomad. I go everywhere.”
Chris Veitch, the reigning men’s club champion at Santa Ana Country
Club, won low gross for amateurs at the Newport Beach Open, shooting
even-par 71.
Newport Beach’s Mike Giddings won low net (69), while Boyd Martin of
Santa Ana Country Club was second low net (71).
Veitch, who played in the inaugural Jones Cup last summer, will miss
this year’s men’s club championship at Santa Ana because of his
daughter’s wedding May 5.
“For Chris, family always comes first,” his wife, Irene, said
Wednesday. “He missed golf tournaments a lot in the past and was not even
able to play in Santa Ana Country Club championships for years because he
was doing Indian Guides and things like that. He’s just been free the
years he has started winning.”
Veitch, who played in a golf tournament Wednesday in Los Angeles and
was unavailable for comment, is a four-time Santa Ana club champion who
has won three straight.
“I practiced a lot until about age 30, then work and family took over,
but for some reason I’ve been able to hold onto (a consistent game),”
Veitch, 47, said in July. “(I’ve been able to win tournaments) even with
a minimal amount of practice and minimal amount of playing. I don’t know
why.”
Veitch won 1998 and ’99 Newport Beach Open amateur titles, then did
not play in 2000.
Seems like Veitch wins whenever he shows up.
Costa Mesa pro Bryan Saltus, who captured the first Golden State Tour
event he entered this year at Western Hills Country Club, finished tied
for third at 3-under 68 in the Newport Beach Open. Costa Mesa pro Darren
Ernst also tied for third.
Rich Saul, the former All-Pro center for the Rams, is hosting the 19th
annual Childhelp USA Celebrity Golf Classic May 16 at Pelican Hill Golf
Club.
The Orange County Chapter of Childhelp USA, based in Newport Beach, is
expecting a full field of golfers and proceeds to net approximately
$150,000. Childhelp USA was founded in 1959 and is dedicated to the
treatment, prevention and research of child abuse and neglect. Details:
(949) 589-2770.
The Costa Mesa-based Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation is
hosting its Links to the Cure Golf Tournament May 3 at Coyote Hills Golf
Course in Fullerton. Details: (714) 957-9157.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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