Golf: Tea Cup adds drama for club champions
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Richard Dunn
Once you win a club championship, that’s it. You collect your
trophy, buy a few rounds and go home. See ya next year.
But, since the Tea Cup Classic was launched in 1997, club champions in
the Daily Pilot circulation have earned a ticket into the locally famous
event for women.
“Once you win a club championship,” said first-time Big Canyon Country
Club champion Olivia Slutzky, “there’s really no drama after winning it.
So, now, it’s great to look forward to this. It’s something special for
women golfers.”
The cozy, 18-hole stroke-play event -- July 27 at Newport Beach
Country Club at 1 p.m. -- will feature three-time defending champion
Marianne Towersey of Santa Ana Country Club, Denise Woodard of Mesa Verde
Country Club, Debbie Albright of host Newport Beach and Slutzky.
Since the Tea Cup Classic started in 1997, neither Towersey, Woodard
nor Albright have relinquished their respective club titles.
The men also have their day in the sun now in the Newport-Mesa
community -- in the form of the Jones Cup.
Several of the amateurs playing in Jones Cup II, Aug. 14 at Santa Ana
Country Club, have been hot lately.
For example: Not only did Jones Cup participant Gregg Hemphill of
Santa Ana win his first men’s club championship this year, he captured
the club’s member/member low-gross championship with Dave Bock last fall.
The team shot 64-68--132 in the better ball of partners, the same format
as the Jones Cup.
For Hemphill to win the SACC men’s club championship last spring, it
was quite a feat, considering the club’s stiff competition from players
like Eric Pepys, Frank Robitaille, John Mullins, Lew Schmid, Ed Shumaker,
Wayne Searcey, Jake Klohs, Duane Hastings, Boyd Martin and Brian
Towersey. Just to name a few.
Chris Veitch, Santa Ana’s three-time defending champion, did not
compete in the 2001 SACC men’s club championship, because the date of the
finals conflicted with his daughter’s wedding in La Quinta.
Hemphill, who has an 8-month-old baby boy at home, became the fourth
different player to win a Santa Ana men’s club title since 1995, when
Martin won his fifth title. Rick Herrera won titles in 1996-97.
Mesa Verde’s Pete Daley, who, at 61, is among the busiest senior
golfers in the country, is returning to the Jones Cup to defend his title
with head pro Tom Sargent, whose Flop Shot Heard ‘Round the World set up
an easy birdie putt on 18 to win last year’s inaugural Jones Cup for Mesa
Verde.
It appears Ron Maggard will play for Big Canyon Country Club with Bob
Lovejoy, the club’s Director of Golf.
In 2000, Maggard enjoyed a career year with the Five Crowns of Golf,
winning Big Canyon’s Grand Slam quintet.
Maggard won the club’s senior men’s title, the match-play
championship, the senior match-play championship, the couples title with
his wife, Linda, and the men’s club championship all in the same year.
In the men’s club championship, which gave Maggard his unofficial
Jones Cup entry, he defeated Will Tipton in an exciting four-hole
playoff, after blowing a five-stroke lead over the final two holes in
regulation.
(Each club from the area selects a pro-am team for the Jones Cup, a
“featured” staff professional and, assumably, the men’s club champion).
The Jones Cup and Tea Cup Classic are played under the auspices of the
Fletcher Jones Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club Championship Series, started by
this sports section in 1997.
The 29th annual Costa Mesa City Championship, formerly known as the
Will Jordan Classic, is Aug. 4-5 at Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club. Scott
Osterhout is the defending champion. Details: (714) 540-7500, x 3.
Ryan Ozonian of Newport Coast shot a final-round 75 for a two-day
total of 152 to capture the overall boys division title last week at the
Junior Amateur Golf Scholars (JAGS) Summer Series at Goose Creek Golf
Club in Mira Loma.
In the opening round, temperatures climbed over the 105-degree mark
with relentless winds, as Ozonian fired a low-round of 77 to lead the
tournament after 18 holes.
On the second day, Ozonian carded a 6-over-par 41 on the front nine,
with temperatures down to the mid-90s, but with continued winds.
On the back nine, Ozonian posted a 1-under 34 to secure his first JAGS
Tour title.
“The wind was really blowing on the front and it was hard to read the
greens and stay focused,” Ozonian said. “I wasn’t going to let this
tournament get away from me, so I settled down and started the back nine
hitting fairways and greens in regulation and dropping putts for a
bogey-free 1-under 34.”
The next JAGS Tour stop is July 19-20 at Green River Golf Course in
Corona. Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club will host a JAGS Tour stop Aug.
28-29.
The JAGS Tour, a year-round tour for boys and girls 13-18, has seven 36-hole tournaments with no cut for the 2001 summer series.
Membership in JAGS is not a requirement to play, but all players must
meet the 3.0 grade-point average standard. JAGS entry fees include green
fees, range balls, lunch and awards. Details: (562) 493-8416 or (714)
952-3316.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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