Golf: Looking for more nostalgia
- Share via
Richard Dunn
The Senior PGA Tour will be trying to beef up its tournaments with
more familiar names in 2002, but the tour might also alienate the fringe
50-and-over players again.
Of the several proposed changes the tour is seeking, one is suggested
to increase each tournament’s playing field from 78 players to 84 through
two new categories:
Four of the spots will be available for players with at least two PGA
Tour victories or one major championship; the other two spots will be
sponsor’s exemptions for players who meet the same criteria. There will
still be only four open qualifying spots each week.
Part of the reason for the tour’s decline in television ratings and
ongoing struggle to keep individual tournament title sponsors is because
of unknowns on the golf course.
The Senior Tour, operated at each stop by a charity at each stop,
needs players like Lee Trevino to sell a few tickets. And while Allen
Doyle might have enjoyed another tremendous year on the tour, it is
unlikely he would get stopped at a mall.
The tour, which has experienced incredible success in Newport Beach
with the Toshiba Senior Classic (managed by Hoag Hospital), has been
accused in the past of operating under the good-ol’ boy network. Some
players have filed lawsuits against the tour, claiming the path to get
into a tournament is too difficult and unfair.
The tour is designed so that stars from the PGA Tour have the easiest
path. Most of the players come from the previous year’s official money
list and the all-time money list. Only eight spots are open to nonexempt
players, four of which are sponsor’s exemptions.
Jimmy Adams, a part-time Lido Isle resident and a regular on the
Monday qualifying circuit, understands that fans pay to watch the marquee
players, but believes that they also want to see the unknown player make
it big.
Doyle, who won the 2000 Toshiba Classic at Newport Beach Country Club,
said the tour is a combination of competition and nostalgia, but added
that “if the (television) ratings are down, whatever is driving us isn’t
doing a very good job.”
Even before the tumbling economy in the aftermath of Sept. 11, as many
as seven events on the Senior Tour were reportedly threatening to go by
the wayside in 2002.
How long can nostalgia hold up when Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus
are virtually out of the picture? And, while a new crop of 50-year-olds
show up each year, is someone like Fuzzy Zoeller, who turned 50 this
month, the type of player who fits the so-called “nostalgia” label?
Outside of Newport and a few other stops, the Senior Tour is in need
of a make-over.
Among the proposed changes Wednesday include putting microphones on
players, having them stop to answer questions that fans submit during the
round, allowing the gallery to walk down the fairway over the final four
holes and asking players to conduct clinics. The tour will also try to
avoid taped broadcasts on CNBC, which took over this year for ESPN after
seven years of declining ratings.
Increasing the field by six players, however, caught my attention
because of players like Adams and Harry Toscano, who filed a $9-million
antitrust suit against the PGA Tour and some of its sponsors, alleging a
conspiracy that limits the field to certain players.
The increased field will not help players like Toscano, but will
benefit veterans like Tommy Aaron, Walt Zembriski and Orville Moody.
Golf course architect Tom Fazio was on hand Thursday night at the 10th
anniversary celebration of Pelican Hill Golf Club, which he designed.
Pelican Hill’s 10th anniversary golf tournament is today at 10 a.m. on
the Ocean South course -- the first of two 18-hole courses built.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.