Champion still tapping his potential
- Share via
It might be a little presumptuous, and it certainly adds pressure
to the defending champion, but it’s impossible not to think about Big
Canyon Country Club’s Mike Carpenter and his future in golf as he
prepares for the 30th annual Costa Mesa City Championship at Costa
Mesa Golf & Country Club Saturday and Sunday.
Carpenter, who qualified last month for the U.S. Amateur
Championship Aug. 19-25 at Oakland Hills, could be the Costa Mesa
event’s next Mark O’Meara or Scott Simpson.
Carpenter, who has only been playing golf seriously for three
years, is an easy 300-plus off the tee and seems to have mastered the
short game, compiling an amazing 18-under-par in his career in three
rounds at Costa Mesa’s shorter Mesa Linda course (5,551 yards),
shooting 66, 63 and 63.
“His potential is totally untapped. He doesn’t even know how good
he is,” said Costa Mesa teaching pro Andy Crinella, who started
giving Carpenter lessons after the Big Canyon standout won last
year’s Costa Mesa title.
“I think he could (eventually earn his PGA Tour card). He’s
probably the best athlete I’ve seen since Mac O’Grady, as far as
somebody being able to do any sport and do it well. They have similar
builds, too.”
O’Grady, who plays right-handed and putts left-handed, is
primarily known as a frequently sought swing guru.
Carpenter, 29, will try to become only the third player in history
to win back-to-back Costa Mesa championships.
The event, which has over 300 registered golfers for the second
straight year (a record 376 this year, including 176 in the
championship flight), has a history of its champions going on to
bigger and better things.
* Future major championship winners on the PGA Tour, Simpson and
O’Meara, won Costa Mesa city titles in the 1970s.
O’Meara, then of Mission Viejo, won the 1979 Costa Mesa
championship a week after capturing the U.S. Amateur Championship in
Cleveland, Ohio. “O’Meara drove all the way from Cleveland to Costa
Mesa to play in this tournament. That’s how important this tournament
was to O’Meara,” the late Joe Costello once said. Costello started
the tournament in 1973, formerly known as the Will Jordan Classic,
when he was president of the Costa Mesa men’s club. The inaugural
champion, Jim George (Estancia High), owns the distinction of playing
in every championship.
O’Meara, who won the Masters and British Open in 1998, defeated
Brad Greer in a two-hole playoff in the ’79 Costa Mesa championship
and turned pro shortly thereafter.
Simpson, the 1987 U.S. Open winner, won the Costa Mesa title in
1974 when he was a standout at USC. Simpson, playing with his father,
Joe, knocked down a 45-foot wedge shot to within four feet on the
18th green in the final round to set up the winning putt.
John Wardrup (1990-91) and Bryan Saltus (1995-96) are the only
back-to-back winners.
* Two of this year’s Jones Cup amateur participants, Jeff Wright
(Newport Beach Country Club) and Danny Lane (Big Canyon), are playing
this weekend in the championship flight.
Lane, who will play with Carpenter and Big Canyon buddies Will
Tipton and Danny Donovan in the first round, won Jones Cup III on his
home course July 26 with Big Canyon Director of Golf Bob Lovejoy.
Lane, the former standout Laguna Beach High football quarterback
and minor league baseball player in the Montreal chain, thrived in
the spotlight during crunch time in Jones Cup III and birdied two of
the last three holes, including No. 18 in front of his home fans with
a 20-foot putt.
* The Toshiba Senior Classic has officially become the first
tournament in Senior PGA Tour history to donate more than $1 million
to charity in three consecutive years.
The event, played at Newport Beach every March, raised $1,001,920
for 2002 after the final tally.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.