Toshiba Senior Classic Golf: Cool in the clutch
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Richard Dunn
There’s no stogie in his mouth or unique style hat. The fact that
Jose Maria Canizares doesn’t even wear a hat makes him unique on the
Senior PGA Tour.
Canizares, the defending Toshiba Senior Classic champion at Newport
Beach Country Club next week, doesn’t dance on the green or pretend his
golf club is a sword. He doesn’t pop off to the press or hunt for
television cameras.
While Canizares might not be as colorful as Gary McCord or have a
swagger like Lee Trevino, the gentleman from Spain holds a distinguished
place in Toshiba Classic lore, winning a marathon nine-hole playoff last
year after holing a downhill, left-to-right breaker with nightfall
approaching.
After having three putts lip out in the playoff against Gil Morgan,
Canizares won on the 63rd hole, draining a 24-foot birdie putt on a
difficult two-tiered green on the par-3 No. 17, Newport Beach Country
Club’s signature hole, where Bob Murphy capped the event’s 1997 nine-hole
playoff, then a Senior PGA Tour record, with an 80-foot birdie putt.
Canizares, who requires an interpreter for interviews, said that “it’s
very hard” to maintain your focus and composure after missing so many
close putts in a nail-biting playoff, especially in cold, windy
conditions.
“You’re not getting lucky and so you start to doubt the possibilities.
But the most important thing is to be very positive in the moment and to
wait for that lucky chance to get it in,” said Canizares, who won his
first event on the Senior Tour and first title anywhere since 1992 on the
European Tour.
Canizares, who had potential tournament-winning putts lip out on the
first, second and fourth playoff holes, started last year’s final round
five strokes behind leader Terry Mauney and promptly carded a 4-under 67
to earn his way into a playoff with Morgan at 11-under.
Morgan appeared to be in the driver’s seat after closing at 7-under
64, but Canizares birdied the final hole in regulation with a 10-foot
putt to set up the playoff.
The duo had pars on the first six holes, and both birdied the seventh
hole (No. 18 on the course). After pars on the eighth playoff hole,
Canizares ended the second-longest playoff in Senior Tour history with
his birdie putt on the ninth extra hole.
“In the playoff, it was just a matter of waiting to see who was going
to make a birdie, (or) who was going to fail,” Canizares said. “And there
was a lot of pressure, but it was very interesting. It was the longest
playoff, but it was great for me.”
Canizares, crowned the seventh different Toshiba champion in seven
years, said the golf course at Newport Beach is similar to the courses in
Europe.
“It’s small. The fairways are narrow. You have to be thinking a lot
while you’re playing,” said the former European Ryder Cup member. “It’s a
course that’s better adapted to the kind of game that I’ve been playing
all my life.”
Canizares, who will return to Newport Beach for the eighth annual
Toshiba Classic, and Morgan were unlikely candidates to take part in a
playoff when the 2001 final round started. Morgan opened at seven strokes
off the pace, Canizares was five shots back. But leaders Mauney, Bob
Gilder and Larry Nelson struggled in the final round.
“In golf you always have a chance. In 18 holes, anything is possible,”
said Canizares, 55, after winning last year and earning $210,000 for the
victory, the largest paycheck of his professional golf career.
Also in 2001, Canizares had two second-place finishes, 12 top-10
finishes, ended 14th on the circuit’s money list and completed his fourth
straight year with over $1 million in earnings.
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