Toshiba Senior Classic Golf: 30 out of 31 -- a .967 batting average
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for Toshiba draw
Richard Dunn
Bruce Lietzke only shows up to these Senior PGA Tour events once
every so often. He’s like a caped crusader, landing only when necessary.
Lietzke, whose playing schedule was the envy of many on the PGA Tour,
never competing in more than 20 events in a year after 1989, is doing it
again on the 50-and-over senior circuit. He’s the world’s best part-time
player.
However, you will not read Lietzke’s quotes in these pages next week
during the eighth annual Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country
Club, nor will you see his score. He’s the only member of last year’s
elite top-31 money leaders who will not play in the Toshiba Classic.
Golf aficionados admire his ability to play one-third of the time of
his Senior Tour peers and still post automatic exemptions for the
following year with his earnings.
But this year he’s culprit keeping the Toshiba from a perfect record
in top-31 attendees, a benchmark by which all tournaments are measured in
terms of strength of field.
The Toshiba Senior Classic, which has always had one of the best
fields on tour despite its ill-timed scheduling and solo venture on the
West Coast, is now the middle of three California stops on tour and has
been pushed back from Week 9 on the calendar to Week 10.
Lietzke, who played in only 10 events last year yet finished 16th on
the money list at over $1.1 million, won two tournaments last year: The
3M Championship and SAS Championship.
An analysis directed by the Senior PGA Tour to determine the different
tournament fields throughout 2001 concluded that the Toshiba Classic had
the second-best field on tour last year.
The field study, based on the tour’s top 31 money leaders from the
previous year, placed the event No. 1 among non-majors as the 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.
“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.”
With early player commitments (there are sometimes drops), the 2002
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.”
Purser added that the strong field is a reflection of many things,
including the golf course at Newport Beach and the way the tournament
hosts the players.
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