Toshiba Senior Classic Golf: Senior Tour trying to become more
fan-friendly
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - The Senior PGA Tour has introduced a series of new
initiatives this year, but perhaps the most compelling change will affect
the television viewing audience and not those in attendance at the golf
tournament.
Attaching microphones to players -- one of the more controversial
ideas the tour is trying -- appears to be somewhat of a success with most
of the season’s early tournaments going along with the program.
But some players, including two-time Senior Tour Player of the Year
and leading money winner Bruce Fleisher, wonder if miking players is
asking for trouble.
“You’ve got to look at that real hard. We’re still playing for big
dollars. We’re still competing,” said Fleisher, referring to the fact
that a player in contention heading to the 18th tee might not be
comfortable wearing a microphone, knowing his every utterance will be
heard in living rooms across America.
Of the tour’s new initiatives, dropping the ropes for the last group
so the gallery can follow will happen for the first time in the eighth
annual Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country Club.
Tournament director Jeff Purser said the ropes will be dropped at 16
and fans can walk behind the leaders for the remaining three holes.
Purser added that they “will try to have some player interaction on
Friday (March 8), Saturday and Sunday outside of the clubhouse.” There
will not be a Q & A session between the player and fans, Purser said, but
some type of fan-friendly post-round discussion will probably take place.
“Tons of this depends on the player,” said Purser, who has implemented
his own promotion this year for the Toshiba Classic, a lottery to win a
nine-hole round with Fuzzy Zoeller in the Toshiba Monday Pro-Am (March
4).
Other proposed changes the tour is seeking for 2003 include an
increase in 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.
Other new initiatives include having players stop to answer questions
that fans submit during the round and asking players to conduct clinics.
The tour will also try to avoid taped broadcasts on CNBC, which took over
last year for ESPN after seven years of declining ratings.
Part of the reason for the tour’s decline in television ratings and
ongoing struggle to keep individual tournament title sponsors, some
believe, is because of unknowns on the golf course.
Let’s face it. Who really cares if Fleisher is miked up coming down
the stretch? Now, if it’s Arnold Palmer or Lee Trevino wearing a
microphone, fewer television viewers are likely to flip the channel on
their remote.
Allen Doyle, who won the rain-shortened 2000 Toshiba Classic at
Newport Beach, 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 9/11, 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 Palmer and Jack Nicklaus don’t
play anymore? And, while a new crop of 50-year-olds show up each year, is
someone like Zoeller the type of player who fits the so-called
“nostalgia” label?
How the new Senior Tour initiatives affect Newport and the rest of its
stops remain to be seen.
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