Golf: Second-best spot not so bad for Toshiba
Richard Dunn
An analysis directed by the Senior PGA Tour to determine the
different tournament fields throughout 2001 concluded that the Toshiba
Senior Classic in Newport Beach had the second-best field on the tour
last year.
The field study, based on the Senior Tour’s top 31 money leaders from
the previous year, placed the event at Newport Beach Country Club No. 1
among non-majors on the Senior Tour.
Last year’s 78-player Toshiba field included 30 of top 31 money
winners, who earn automatic exemptions for the next year.
“The only tournament that had a better field was the Ford Senior
Players Championship, which is a major on the Senior Tour and operated by
the PGA Tour and not a local entity like Hoag Hospital,” said tournament
director Jeff Purser, whose management team has raised $3.7 million in
charitable dollars in the four years under his watch.
“We only missed Bob Murphy, who is a past Toshiba champion (1997),
because he had duties and a contract with NBC to cover last year,” Purser
added. “So we would have had all top 31. The next closest tournament was
29 and there was only one of those, and everyone else was 28 or below.”
Last week, Purser said the 2002 field will be very strong again,
perhaps better than last year.
Arnold Palmer, however, is not expected to be among the 78 players in
the Toshiba field March 4-10.
The King, who played here in 2000 for the first time and created a
stir like Elvis was coming to town, will once again stay close to his
tournament, the Bay Hill Invitational in Florida, which is played on the
PGA Tour shortly after the Toshiba Classic.
“Obviously we would love to have him,” Purser said. “It would mean
everything in the world to us. But it’s just not feasible for him to do
that.”
Still, the Toshiba field should rival last year’s, when the only
in-season professional golf tournament in Orange County had a stronger
field the Countrywide Tradition, a major championship that hosted 29 of
the top 31.
“We appreciate the support of the Senior Tour players,” Purser said.
“Even during the years when we were the only West Coast event on the
early part of the schedule, the players supported this tournament and we
always enjoyed solid fields. Now that we’re part of the three-event West
Coast Swing for the second year, we look forward to hosting just as
strong a field, maybe even stronger.”
In a Toshiba Senior Classic promotion, the event is hooking up with
Roger Dunn Golf Shops (with five Southland locations, including Santa
Ana, Seal Beach, Anaheim and Mission Viejo) on an opportunity drawing to
win a round with Fuzzy Zoeller in the Monday Pro-Am March 4 at Newport
Beach.
The winner of the drawing will play nine holes with Zoeller and
another member of the Senior PGA Tour for nine holes.
Officials from Kraft, which is sponsoring Zoeller and paying him an
appearance fee, will play with Mr. Personality after the turn.
“It’s $20 to enter, and all the proceeds are benefiting Hoag
Hospital,” said Purser, who added that, while it might be tough to reach
the $1 million plateau in charitable giving this year following 9/11,
it’s possible to achieve the benchmark the Toshiba Classic has
established in back-to-back years.
Unlike most years, the golf course at Newport Beach remains very much
the same way it was last year, when Jose Maria Canizares won a nine-hole
playoff against Gil Morgan.
“We really haven’t changed anything from last year,” Newport Beach
Country Club President Jerry Anderson said. “We’ve rebuilt a couple of
tees, but we really haven’t changed anything. We’ve focused more on just
getting the golf course ready for the Toshiba and making sure it’s in
premiere condition.”
Anderson said PGA Tour officials were out inspecting superintendent
Ron Benedict’s masterpiece in early January and had nothing but positive
comments.
“The changes we’ve made over the last few years are really maturing,”
Anderson said. “The landscaping (at the par-3 No. 4 over water) is really
coming out.”
Before last year’s tournament, the course changed the hole at 18,
building mounds behind a newly elevated green for a different look on
players’ approach shots.
While the golf course isn’t long (6,584 yards), it features subtle and
difficult greens, giving the layout some teeth.
“The winning scores here have been 10-to-12-under,” Anderson said. “A
lot of these tournaments are (posting winning scores of) 18-to-20-under,
even for three rounds. So this golf course has held up extremely well for
the Senior PGA Tour players. People are out there having fun. They’re not
burning it up.”
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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