Golf: New champion on the rise at Mesa Verde
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Richard Dunn
A changing of the guard -- as well as a special parking spot at
Mesa Verde Country Club and automatic entry into the Tea Cup Classic --
appears to be in order at Mesa Verde.
Only something of miracle proportions can stop Akemi Khaiat from
winning the 2002 women’s club championship and ending Denise Woodard’s
club-record streak of six straight titles.
Khaiat, with a 20-stroke lead heading into Friday’s final round, is a
relatively new member at Mesa Verde and apparently a hot golfer.
Mesa Verde’s four-round club championship was scheduled to conclude
Tuesday, but inclement weather last week postponed the event and pushed
back the final round until Friday.
After three rounds in Mesa Verde’s championship flight, Khaiat has
posted an 84-79-79--242, followed by Woodard (93-80-89--262), Sue Jane
Chi (87-90-87--264) and Natalie King (95-90-87--272).
Woodard and King are tied for Mesa Verde’s all-time lead in club
titles with six. King won her championships from 1982 through 1995.
If Khaiat manages to hold on to her lead, she would become eligible
for Tea Cup Classic VI at Santa Ana Country Club this summer (TBA).
The Tea Cup Classic, the women’s portion of the Fletcher Jones
Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club Championship Series, was started by this
sports section in 1997 to crown an annual Daily Pilot women’s club
champion, promote the game in the area and bring the golf community
closer together.
Olivia Slutzky (Big Canyon Country Club) and Marianne Towersey (Santa
Ana) have already qualified for Tea Cup Classic VI.
Defending Tea Cup champion Debbie Albright of Newport Beach Country
Club snapped Towersey’s three-year Tea Cup winning streak in 2001.
Albright will attempt to win her seventh straight Newport Beach title May
17.
Renowned golf course architect Tom Fazio, who directed the dramatic
changes at Augusta National before this year’s Masters, continues to make
a strong imprint in this part of the world.
Fazio, who designed both courses at Pelican Hill Golf Club, is the
architect of Shady Canyon Golf Club, the new layout in rugged terrain on
the cusp of Newport Coast.
The 300-acre course is laid out behind outcroppings of boulders, where
individual homesites start at $700,000. Mark McGwire has already
purchased two lots in the private residential and golf community.
So how will Shady Canyon, which does not have ocean views, stack up
against the best courses in the world?
“We don’t need an ocean because this is as good as any golf course on
the ocean, whether it’s in Scotland, Ireland, or Lynchburg (Va.),” Fazio
said. “Our goal is to produce a course where people will say, ‘This is as
good a golf course as I have ever seen in my life, anywhere.’
“It’s got a great feel and it’s about as different as you can get from
an oceanfront course. It looks like it’s been there forever. That’s the
job, to make it look that way.”
Newport Beach Country Club is hosting a U.S. Open local qualifying for
the third year in a row.
The 102nd U.S. Open Championship is June 13-16 at Bethpage State Park
(Black Course) in Farmingdale, N.Y.
The local qualifying at Newport Beach is 18 holes on May 15, with the
Southern California Golf Association operating the event. Newport Beach
is one of seven Southland courses to be used during qualifying week (May
13-20) by the SCGA.
The Derby at Santa Ana Country Club, a prestigious annual men’s
member/guest event on the SCGA calendar, is May 16-18.
The defending champions are Don Mills and guest Ray Casciari (Yorba
Linda).
The time-honored Derby changes the playing format each round during
the competition.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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