Golf: McGwire goes deep at Toshiba Pro-Am
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Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Instead of launching tape-measure home runs, future
Baseball Hall of Famer Mark McGwire spent one of his first days away from
spring training crushing golf balls in the Toshiba Pro-Am Monday at
Newport Beach Country Club.
McGwire, who arrived unannounced and with no fanfare, displayed
unbelievable length off the tee -- surprise, surprise -- but struggled at
times around the green.
“It’s a lot harder than baseball,” McGwire said of golf, which was
actually his first sport as a 5-year-old. “There’s no margin for error in
golf. In baseball, you have that margin for error.”
McGwire said he’s “just trying to enjoy life” in his first year of
retirement after his record-setting career that included 70 home runs in
1998 for the St. Louis Cardinals.
McGwire, who plans to remarry this year -- “she’s a good Midwestern
girl,” he said -- has purchased a sizable lot at Shady Canyon, the
high-end Irvine Co. development with a Tom Fazio-designed golf course.
McGwire, a former Costa Mesa resident, said he isn’t fielding any
questions about baseball. “I told myself I’m going to go one or two
months without any baseball questions,” said McGwire, after posing for
pictures with amateurs in his group and signed a few autographs at the
10th green before an otherwise unassuming gallery, which included two
newspaper reporters for part of the round.
“Actually, I haven’t played golf in 5 1/2 years and I just started to
play again in October,” added McGwire, who eagled the par-5 510-yard No.
18, ripping his tee shot to within 167 yards, then using a 7-iron to
reach the green in two.
On the par-4, 407-yard No. 9, a dogleg right, McGwire, whose tee shots
reached 350 yards, came within 70 yards of the hole, a difficult hole
that elevates from the fairway to green.
McGwire, who opened his round on No. 11 with Senior PGA Tour Larry
Ziegler and three other amateurs, including Toshiba head Mark Simons,
wrapped up his day at the par-5 439-yard No. 10, where his tee shot left
him less than 100 yards to the pin.
McGwire showed he was human, however, when his putt from the fringe
flew across the green to the other fringe.
On the par-4 339-yard No. 1, McGwire ripped a thunderous drive to a
bunker just to the right of the green. But he couldn’t get up and down
and carded a five.
McGwire, though, isn’t concerned about his golf game or playing on any
celebrity circuits. But he does enjoy playing with his buddies, like Bill
Mitchell of the Irvine Co. at Shady Canyon, where McGwire, who wore
uniform No. 25 on his back for St. Louis, received the 25th Shady Canyon
membership in honor of his jersey number.
“It’s spectacular,” McGwire said of Shady Canyon, where his home is
expected to be completed in “a couple of years.”
McGwire, who still lives in Huntington Beach, has lived in Orange
County for several years, a great misnomer, he said.
“People are still surprised when I tell them I live in Orange County,”
McGwire said. “They think I live in Oakland or St. Louis ... I’ve been
living here since 1982 or ’83.”
McGwire turned down the Cardinals’ $30-million contract extension
offer last October and, instead, retired with unheralded class. He
finished with 583 career home runs, including his celebrated 70 in 1998
to break Roger Maris’ 37-year-old mark. Barry Bonds hit 73 home runs last
year for the San Francisco Giants to break McGwire’s record.
McGwire grew up playing golf at Sierra La Verne Country Club, Glendora
Country Club and Mountain Meadows Golf Course in Pomona.
In his retirement, McGwire also spends more time with his 14-year-old
son, Matt, who greeted him at home plate during most of his
record-breaking homers in ’98.
“He’s not a baseball player,” McGwire said. “He wants to be the best
guitarist in the world. He wants to be a musician and I’m very proud of
him.”
Amateurs Bob Stegner and Mike Van Gieson also played in McGwire’s
group Monday.
McGwire will also play in the Toshiba Senior Classic Pro-Ams Wednesday
and Thursday, tournament publicist Chris Premer said.
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