Golf: Gates open for Toshiba Senior Classic
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - As tens of thousands of people come through the
main entrance to the Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country Club
this week -- kick-started by today’s Toshiba Pro-Am -- they will walk
through the latest computer technology utopia, courtesy of the title
sponsor.
But as they step outside to the lush fairways at Newport Beach,
tournament officials will be on their hands and knees praying for the
same weather we’ve enjoyed for the past several weeks.
While Newport Beach superintendent Ron Benedict calls it a drought --
he wishes we’d had more rain this winter -- the event’s tournament
director, Jeff Purser, has probably done enough rain dances to cause it.
The three-day event, considered the most philanthropic tournament on
the Senior PGA Tour, is Friday, Saturday and Sunday, with pro-ams and
practice rounds earlier in the week.
There will even be a warm and fuzzy feeling to the whole thing this
week in the Toshiba Classic, the only in-season professional golf
tournament in Orange County and now the middle of three Senior Tour stops
in the state.
Fuzzy Zoeller, viewed as part golfer, part savior for the so-called
sagging senior circuit, will never win a golf tournament on personality.
But the most anticipated rookie on the Senior Tour this year is expected
to add spice to the 50-and-over circuit.
Long a gallery favorite for his relaxed approach to the game, Zoeller
won 10 PGA Tour titles, including major championship victories at the
1979 Masters and 1984 U.S. Open Championship. He will play in today’s
pro-am and speak Tuesday morning at the Toshiba Community Breakfast at
the Newport Beach Marriott.
After last year’s event battled the threat of rain almost daily,
Purser continued to plead his case to the Senior PGA Tour, asking for a
later date.
The tour granted Purser his wish and pushed the Toshiba Classic back a
week on the calendar, making the Newport Beach stop the second of three
straight California weekends for the players on what is now the Great
West Coast Swing -- beginning with the SBC Senior Classic at Valencia
Country Club, which concluded Sunday.
With Zoeller and the usual cast of notable seniors like Lee Trevino
and Chi Chi Rodriguez, along with good weather, Purser is expecting the
Toshiba Classic to strike gold again for its lead charity, Hoag Hospital,
the beneficiary of most of the $3.7 million raised by the tournament in
the last four years.
“Even though we got the tournament in last year, we didn’t have the
best weather in the world and that kept a lot of people away,” Purser
said. “Our galleries were significantly down last year compared with 1998
and ’99 when we had wonderful weather.
“If we’re fortunate to get great weather this year, and with Fuzzy and
Ben Crenshaw and Tom Watson and Tom Kite and Chi Chi coming out, then I
think we have a real good opportunity to get back to the level of
galleries of previous years, and obviously that’s our goal.”
Purser is hoping for about 90,000 fans for the week, the bulk of which
will come Saturday and Sunday.
The eighth annual Toshiba Classic, long an island on the Senior Tour
schedule, had company last March for the first time and it paid off with
the second-strongest field on the tour last year, luring 30 of the top 31
money leaders from the previous year, the best turnout among non-major
championships.
The cozy, 6,584-yard layout at Newport Beach is one of the reasons why
the players have been attracted to the $1.5 million Toshiba Classic. The
traditional tree-lined golf course built almost 50 years ago has been
described by some players as the utopia for a seniors golf course.
Even with today’s economic climate, Purser expects the event to reach
the $1-million mark in charitable giving for the third year in a row.
Last year the Toshiba Classic became the first stop on the tour to
achieve the million-dollar benchmark in back-to-back years.
“It’s too early to tell, but we’ve worked hard to put ourselves in a
position to (raise another $1 million),” Purser said. “With good gate
sales ... we have the opportunity to reach those goals. We’re not quite
there yet, but considering what’s going on in the world and at home,
we’re pretty pleased where we are.”
The tournament has had seven different winners in seven years and
featured three playoffs in the last five events.
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