Toshiba Senior Classic Page 2 Column: The Senior Tour’s fifth major
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championship?
Richard Dunn
While the Toshiba Senior Classic goes for miles in charitable
giving, the wins are measured by inches on the golf course.
This Senior PGA Tour event at Newport Beach Country Club, the only
in-season professional golf tournament in Orange County, has become the
best show in Newport Beach and arguably the greatest stop on tour.
But, for the true proof in any tournament’s pudding, check out the
final scores and margins of victory.
The scores show it is no easy golf course, even though it isn’t long
(6,584 yards). Subtle and difficult greens arm the layout with sharp
teeth.
“The winning scores here have been 10-to-12-under,” Newport Beach
Country Club President Jerry 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.”
Not to mention the fact that the Toshiba Classic has featured playoffs
in three of the past five years, it usually thrives on razor-sharp
finishes.
Aside from Jim Colbert’s two-stroke win in 1996, no Toshiba champion
has won by more than one stroke. That’s six out of seven years we’ve had
a one-shot winner. And, a different winner every year.
While close, nail-biting Sunday rounds are not unique on the Senior
PGA Tour, consider last year’s Countrywide Tradition, a major
championship played at Desert Mountain in Scottsdale, Ariz., where Doug
Tewell won by nine strokes after shooting a course-record 62 in the final
round on the Cochise Course layout.
The Toshiba Senior Classic, which had a nine-hole playoff, again,
might be the tour’s fifth major championship. It certainly has the feel
of one with the customary strong fields (last year’s Toshiba ranked as
the second-best field on the Senior Tour in 2001).
Prior to teeing off in last year’s first round, 1998 Toshiba Classic
champion Hale Irwin said: “I think you’ll see that tight grouping again
on Sunday. We’ve got a great field out here. It almost feels like a
major.”
George Archer (1995), Bob Murphy (‘97), Irwin, Gary McCord (‘99),
Allen Doyle (2000) and Jose Maria Canizares (‘01) have all captured
Toshiba Classic titles in one-stroke style.
Even in the year of the asterisk (2000), when Doyle won a
rain-shortened 36-hole tournament because of inclement weather and a
final-round cancellation, there was a case of suspense, albeit late
Saturday afternoon in the second round under dark, threatening clouds.
Howard Twitty missed finishing in a tie at six-under 136 with Doyle by
less than an inch, when his 15-foot putt from the fringe at 18 to
conclude his second round wouldn’t fall.
Had Twitty made his birdie attempt, there would have been a playoff
Sunday between him and Doyle for the Toshiba title on one of the par-3
holes.
Trailing Doyle by one stroke as he got to the 18th hole, Twitty said
it was in the back of his mind that he needed a birdie if the final round
was canceled (which it was).
“I hit a real good putt on 18,” Twitty said the following day. “It had
a good chance. When you see it raining, you think you might still have a
chance, but the course was pretty wet (Sunday for the final round).”
Twitty’s putt burned the right edge of the cup as it slid past. One
inch, perhaps, cost him a shot at a playoff.
“It was a lot less than an inch,” said Twitty, who settled for a
second-place tie and earned $104,000, still his highest finish on the
Senior Tour.
When it comes to the opening round, things also get a little sticky
with close quarters in the kitchen.
At least two players have been tied for the lead after the first round
in every Toshiba Classic at Newport Beach since 1996, when the event was
moved from Mesa Verde Country Club after the inaugural in ’95.
Twice, including last year, the leader board has been jammed with five
players after the Friday round.
In 1996, Colbert, Lee Trevino, Murphy, Homero Blancas and John
Schroeder shared the opening-round lead at 3-under 68, while Dave
Stockton, Bruce Fleisher, Bob Gilder, Dana Quigley and Canizares all shot
6-under-par 65 to tie for the first-round lead in some of the toughest
conditions on the Senior Tour (wet and muddy).
Furthermore, the Toshiba Classic has a special feel outside the ropes.
“I think the Senior Tour is lucky to have this site,” Al (Mr. 59)
Geiberger said. “Socially, people like to come out to it.”
Geiberger said the Toshiba crowd is a good mix of devoted golfers and
general socialites, while the fan-friendly layout is ideal for a golf
tournament.
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