Home cookin’
Richard Dunn
In her third decade as the darling of women’s golf at Santa Ana
Country Club, Marianne Towersey doesn’t appear to be slowing down
anytime soon. If there was a ladies professional senior tour, she
could qualify and make a living.
Towersey, the Newport-Mesa community’s all-time leader in club
championships (18), continues to shoot career-low scores, despite
reaching senior-division eligibility last year at age 50.
After shooting a women’s course-record 68 at Newport Beach Country
Club in early August, Towersey, who grew up playing Santa Ana Country
Club, posted her first career sub-70 round at the venerable Santa Ana
Heights course -- the oldest golf club in Orange County and one of
the state’s fewest golf-only country clubs.
“I think that was the first time I played a round without a
bogey,” Towersey said of her 68 in the Ladies’ Member/Guest at
Newport Beach with Sandi Coffer, a longtime former Newport Beach club
champion who knows how to pick a partner.
Towersey repeated her bogey-free golf -- she called it
“serendipitous” -- when she carded a 3-under 69 at Santa Ana Country
Club on Aug. 22. It is the lowest round ever recorded by a female
amateur at her home course (LPGA Tour pro Pearl Sinn holds the
women’s course record at 63).
A three-time Tea Cup Classic champion, Towersey has also captured
two championships since May, winning the California Senior Women’s
Amateur Championship at Bayonet Golf Course in Monterey and the
Women’s Golf Association of Southern California title at the PGA of
Southern California Golf Club in Calimesa.
“You’ve got to either get better or worse, and I’d rather get
better,” Towersey, a former junior golf sensation, said of her always
improving game.
Towersey, one of two Tea Cup Classic VI participants who will
compete in the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship later this month
at Eugene Country Club in Eugene, Ore., will face defending Tea Cup
champion Debbie Albright of Newport Beach Country Club, Olivia
Slutzky of Big Canyon Country Club and Akemi Khaiat of Mesa Verde
Country Club (the other U.S. Mid-Am qualifier) in Tea Cup Classic VI
on Wednesday at Santa Ana Country Club at 1 p.m.
“You know and I know that anything happen,” Towersey said of
trying to win a Tea Cup Classic for the second time on her home
course, a 5,399-yard layout from the women’s tees. Towersey won Tea
Cup Classic II at Santa Ana in 1998 to trigger a three-year title
run.
In 2001, Towersey’s first year playing in the seniors division,
she was the medalist at the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur Championship,
a feat proudly recognized during the club’s centennial celebration
last September.
In fact, an entire section of the club’s centennial museum
prominently displayed many of Towersey’s career highlights, including
her stunning upset victory, at age 16, over future LPGA Hall of Famer
JoAnne Carner (nee Gunderson) in the first round of match play in the
1967 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship. A 1999 issue of Golf World
magazine included Towersey’s win over Gunderson as one of the
country’s 10 greatest upsets of the last century.
Known as Marianne Cox in those days, she followed the footsteps of
her mother, Pat, and late father, Alvin, as a golfer. Pat Cox is a
four-time women’s club champion at Santa Ana Country Club, capturing
titles before and after getting married and having children (1947,
‘52, ’61 and ‘62).
This year, Towersey won her 18th Santa Ana women’s club
championship in 21 years, becoming the area’s all-time leader, for
men or women, in club titles -- breaking a tie at 17 with Dee Dee
White of Newport Beach Country Club.
Towersey, also the Newport Harbor High girls golf coach, took an
eight-year hiatus from golf in the 1970s, then returned to the game
when she and her husband, Brian, purchased her family’s membership at
Santa Ana Country Club. When Towersey was pregnant with her second
son, Patrick, she won the 1981 California Women’s Amateur
Championship. Her oldest son, Chad, is a regular contender in state
amateur championships.
Towersey, who lives in Newport Beach, is also the women’s
course-record holder at Big Canyon Country Club.
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