Golf: A unique breed on the Senior Tour
Richard Dunn
On Friday, Ben Crenshaw will turn 50 and become a rookie on the
Senior PGA Tour this year along with Fuzzy Zoeller, Tom Purtzer and Wayne
Levi.
But Crenshaw, the 1995 Masters champion, isn’t like most golfers in
the 50-and-over crowd.
While Crenshaw is thrilled with the opportunity to extend his career
and play for million-dollar purses on the senior circuit, his priorities
are still with young kids at home.
Instead of dealing with weddings and grandchildren, like many on the
Senior Tour, Crenshaw, who didn’t become a father until age 35, will have
to juggle golf and school plays.
“I suppose the only way I’m different than a lot of fellas when they
hit the Senior Tour is that their families are out of the house,”
Crenshaw said Wednesday in a national conference call. “It’s you and your
wife and you’re able to travel and you’re able to play a lot of golf.”
Crenshaw will make his Senior Tour debut at the first full-field
event, the Royal Caribbean Classic, Feb. 1 at Key Biscayne, Fla. He has
also committed to the Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country
Club March 4-10.
After stepping away from the PGA Tour the last few years, Crenshaw is
ready to devote himself to golf on a full-time basis, while still
focusing on a young family.
“I’d like to play every (tournament this year),” said Crenshaw, who,
like Zoeller, Purtzer and Levi, is exempt based on all-time earnings
(over $7 million).
“Because I’ve been away from it for so long, I really think that what
happens is that, you know, you feel like the kid in a candy store. You
want to just have fun at this stage and you want to play good golf, no
question, but what I have to balance is my family.
“I’ve got three young daughters that are really going to be tugging at
my heart. My gosh, they are 14 (Katherine), 10 (Claire) and almost four
(Anna). So I’m in a little different situation.”
Crenshaw has played the golf course at Newport Beach “several times,”
according to club president Jerry Anderson.
Nick Sherman of Newport Beach shot 80-76--156 and finished tied for
third in the season-opening Junior Amateur Golf Scholars Tour New Year
event last week at Green River Golf Club in Corona.
Zack Rabonvich (Newport Coast), Ben Tilsen (Corona del Mar) and Peter
Wilday (CdM) also competed.
The JAGS Tour, a year-round tour for boys and girls 13-18, specializes
in 36-hole tournaments with no cuts for players who maintain a ‘B’
average in school. Details: (562) 493-8416 or (714) 952-3316.
In one of the final Southern California PGA events of 2001, Mesa Verde
Country Club cleaned up by finishing tied for first in the Metropolitan
Chapter Pro-Peddler at Coto de Caza in early December.
The event featured a “peddler,” or golf manufacturer representative,
in each group.
In the scramble format, Mesa Verde assistant professionals Jeremy
Clevenger, Geoff Cochrane and Jason Amorde (along with Lakewood pro David
Stephens) teamed with amateur Chris Beck of Cleveland Golf to card a 55.
The pros won $225 each.
On Monday, Clevenger, Amorde and Mesa Verde head pro Tom Sargent will
play in the year’s first SCPGA event at Dove Canyon.
Cochrane has been hired at Santa Ana Country Club as a first assistant
under Director of Golf Mike Reehl.
Staff members at Mesa Verde are operating comfortably these days in
their temporary trailer facility at the driving range, while the club
undergoes a yearlong, $7-million face lift.
Mesa Verde’s original clubhouse was built in 1959.
The architectural firm hired to complete the project, Colorado-based
Marsh & Associates, is the same company that designed the clubhouse and
locker room facilities at The Bridges at Rancho Santa Fe.
“It’s a hot new club ... and I understand (the clubhouse) is very
elaborate. It’s $250,000 to join (The Bridges),” Sargent said.
The Mesa Verde remodeling project, scheduled to be completed in
December 2002, will encompass the locker rooms, dining and bar areas and
pro shop. “It’s going to be pretty nice,” Sargent added.
The United States Golf Association has been in contact with Mesa Verde
about hosting a U.S. championship in the future.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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