First-time club use was a charm for Slutzky at 18
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Richard Dunn
With the pressure on, while playing the exciting par-5 dogleg left
finishing hole at Santa Ana Country Club, Olivia Slutzky of Big
Canyon Country Club pulled a new club out of her bag -- a 54-degree
wedge from 70 yards -- and promptly set up a thrilling birdie putt
Wednesday in Tea Cup Classic VI, eventually won by Marianne Towersey
of the host club.
While men are always tempted to try for the green in two at Santa
Ana’s famous 18th hole, women play it differently, and Slutzky needed
another miraculous shot to set up a birdie attempt and try to tie
Towersey and force a playoff.
“I hadn’t hit it all day ... it was the first time I pulled it
out,” Slutzky said of the wedge, which she played on the suggestion
of her caddie, Jerome Valentin, a Big Canyon caddie and Canadian Tour
player.
When Slutzky lofted her third shot to within four feet of the flag
on the 18th green, the gallery went wild, realizing what a birdie
would do to the finish of Tea Cup Classic VI.
“Last year, Marianne and I were actually tied going to 18 (in Tea
Cup Classic V at Newport Beach Country Club). Marianne made birdie
and I made par,” said Slutzky, who finished third last year and
placed second this year in a tight race.
Slutzky, however, has no idea when or if she will return to the
game golf. She and her husband, Alan, are expecting their first child
in April 2003, when Big Canyon hosts its women’s club championship,
and even after that Slutzky said she isn’t sure about her future in
golf. “If it was the end, this was a great way to finish,” she said.
Slutzky, the first pregnant player in Tea Cup Classic history,
carded four birdies in the day’s most heart-stopping round, which
included five bogeys and a double. No matter what the golf future
holds for Slutzky, 34, she will always be remembered in Tea Cup
Classic lore.
* Slutzky’s tee shot at the 159-yard par-3 No. 17 nearly fell in
for a hole-in-one, which would have earned her one of the four prizes
sponsored by Fletcher Jones Motorcars -- a trip to PGA Village in
Florida. Slutzky’s shot settled one inch from the cup. “She almost
won that vacation,” her husband quipped. “I was packing my bags.”
* On the par-3 141-yard No. 6, any hole-in-one would have
resulted in winning a Mercedes-Benz M Class Sports Utility Vehicle
(worth $42,000).
“Get in there!” Towersey yelled after her tee shot landed just
inches to the right of the flag, leaving her with a 6-foot birdie
attempt (which she missed).
* Defending Tea Cup Classic champion Debbie Albright of Newport
Beach Country Club suffered a triple bogey at the par-3 No. 6, but
her luck got no better on the next hole, when a putt for par lipped
out.
Albright posted five straights 6s on her scorecard, including a
triple, double and double on 6, 7 and 8, to unfortunately take her
out of contention. Albright kept a smile throughout the round and
showed why the ladies of the Tea Cup Classic have so much class.
* After Towersey’s thrilling 11-foot birdie putt at 18 to clinch
the championship of Tea Cup Classic VI, a tough uphill right-to-left
breaker with Slutzky eyeballing a 4-foot birdie putt to force a
possible playoff, Santa Ana Country Club Director of Golf Mike Reehl
-- the rules official for Tea Cup Classic VI -- walked off the green
and quipped: “How about that! We know how to make them finish, huh?”
* The NFL Alumni’s 24th annual Charity Golf Classic, which
features many former NFL players with local ties, including
Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata, is Sept. 23 at the newly
remodeled Los Coyotes Country Club in Buena Park.
The event, which is scheduled to include Rich Saul, Marlin
McKeever, Paul McDonald, Mark Boyer and Hoby Brenner, among others,
will be in memory of Irv Kaze, who served on the executive board of
the Greater Los Angeles Chapter of the NFL Alumni.
The tournament will benefit various youth charities, including the
Los Angeles Council of Boy Scouts of America. NFL Alumni who will
captain foursomes include NFL Hall of Fame members, players, coaches
and referees. Details: (310) 787-1573 or (562) 461-8714.
* Pelican Hill Golf Club had both of its resort courses ranked in
the country’s top 100 in the September issue of Golf Magazine. The
magazine’s biennial list ranked the Ocean South course 53rd and the
Ocean North course 91st, while Pebble Beach topped the list, followed
by Pacific Dunes (Bandon, Ore.), Bethpage Black (Farmingdale, N.Y.),
Pinehurst No. 2 and TPC at Sawgrass Stadium course (Ponte Vedra
Beach, Fla.).
* Pelican Hill will host the 13th annual Bob Hope & Dr. Howard
House Golf Tournament Sept. 16, and, according to the event’s
beneficiary, $45,000 was raised within 15 minutes in an underwriting
party last Friday for The Orange County Associates of the House Ear
Institute.
Honorees at the underwriting dinner included internationally known
Dr. House and entertainer Phyllis Diller, and tournament director
Gloria Osbrink said she expects a full field of 144 golfers. Details:
(949) 643-9260 or (714) 293-3974.
* RICHARD DUNN’S golf column appears every Thursday.
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