Golf: Tourney reaches milepost
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Richard Dunn
It can make you feel old knowing the Costa Mesa City Championship
will celebrate its 30th anniversary this year at the Costa Mesa Golf &
Country Club.
The championship, formerly known as the Will Jordan Classic, typically
draws the top amateurs in Orange County and enjoys some of the best
public golf lore in county history.
Future major championship winners on the PGA Tour, Scott Simpson and
Mark O’Meara, won Costa Mesa city titles in the 1970s, while the inaugural champion, Jim George, owns the distinction of playing in every
championship.
The field is limited to 320 golfers in several divisions. The two-day
event will take place Aug. 10-11 at the Los Lagos and Mesa Linda courses.
Mike Carpenter of Big Canyon Country Club is the defending champion,
after shooting 66-71--137 to win the 2001 Costa Mesa City Championship by
two strokes over runner-up Jeff Coburn. Ed Susolik of Costa Mesa shot
70-70--140 to finish third. Susolik’s 2-under 70 on Los Lagos was the
lowest score in the final round.
The championship, which has only had two back-to-back winners in 29
years, features $10,000 in prizes. There are five flights, including a
senior division. The lowest handicap index for the past year will be used
and a $175 entry fee will be charged, which includes greens fees for both
days, tee prizes, awards and a barbecue both days.
For more details on this year’s championship, visit the Costa Mesa pro
shop or call (714) 540-7500, ext. 3 or 108.
O’Meara, then of Mission Viejo, won the 1979 Costa Mesa championship a
week after winning the U.S. Amateur Championship in Cleveland, Ohio.
The late Joe Costello, who started the popular Will Jordan Classic in
1973 when he was president of the Costa Mesa men’s club, once said
O’Meara’s victory in ’79 as one of the championship’s greatest moments.
“(O’Meara) drove all the way from Cleveland to Costa Mesa to play in
this tournament,” Costello said. “That’s how important this tournament
was to O’Meara.”
That year, O’Meara won a two-hole playoff against Brad Greer and,
shortly thereafter, turned pro. O’Meara won the Masters and British Open
in 1998.
But O’Meara isn’t the only former Costa Mesa city champion to reach
golf’s pantheon.
In 1974, the second year of the event, then-USC standout Scott Simpson
won at Costa Mesa, defeating, of all people, his father, Joe, on the 18th
hole with a 45-yard wedge shot to within four feet of the flag.
Simpson, who sank the four-footer to win that year, won the 1987 U.S.
Open.
John Wardrup (1990-91) and Bryan Saltus (1995-96) are the only
back-to-back winners.
Mesa Verde Country Club’s Peter Daley, who will play in Jones Cup III
with Mesa Verde head pro Tom Sargent on July 26 at Big Canyon, is gearing
up for the Canadian Senior Amateur in Winnipeg, Manitoba, beginning July
8.
After Jones Cup III, Daley will play in the British Senior Amateur at
Woodall Spa in London.
The Orange County Associates of the House Ear Institute announced that
its 13th annual Bob Hope & Dr. Howard House Golf Tournament will be Sept.
16 at Pelican Hill Golf Club.
The tournament, under the direction of honorary chair Elizabeth
Vincent of Newport Beach, will host an array of celebrities, including
Norm Crosby, Jonathan Banks, Florence Henderson, Phyllis Diller, Nanette
Fabray and special guest Rush Limbaugh.
“We anticipate at least 144 players participating in this year’s
event,” tournament director Ron Osbrink said. Details: (714) 390-4230 or
(949) 643-9260.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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