It’s all in the choice
Hale Irwin isn’t the type to get attached. There are some baseball
players who use the same glove their entire careers, but golfers are
much different about their equipment -- as Irwin proves.
Last year, Irwin changed almost every club in his bag before
winning the Toshiba Senior Classic for the second time.
Before teeing off in the first round, Irwin switched to forged
blade irons, changed from graphite to steel shafts, added a couple of
new fairway woods and a new sand wedge, then went out and shot
67-64-65 for the finest round of 54 in Toshiba history. He dominated
the field with a tournament scoring record 17-under 196.
Irwin’s victory at Newport Beach Country Club catapulted him to
the top of the 2002 money list and he never looked back, winning the
Senior PGA Tour money title and becoming the first senior to eclipse
the $3-million mark in single-season earnings ($3,028,304). It was
his third money title.
But Irwin’s at it again.
“This year, I’ve changed (clubs) once again. I’ve changed from
Cobra to Taylor Made. The only constant in my bag is my putter,”
Irwin said Tuesday during a phone conference.
Irwin also said technology in today’s equipment, including balls,
has not only helped him in the past few years, but the last few
weeks.
“I’m hitting the ball farther than ever,” said Irwin, who added
that everyone on the tour is longer off the tee now with Titanium
shafts, club heads and balls.
“The ball doesn’t curve as much. You can just take dead aim and
fire.”
Must be nice.
*
Irwin, who said before the Toshiba Classic last year that he hoped
to remain “interested” in competing for another money title on the
Senior PGA Tour, won 34th career senior event here last year and
apparently remained interested in winning another money title.
Irwin, who won the 1998 Toshiba Classic after firing a
course-record 62 on Sunday, won the tournament in March -- three
months before his 57th birthday.
“When someone tells me I can’t, it tends to motivate me,” Irwin
said. “I’m not one that looks back but looks forward, try to create
opportunities for success.”
Irwin and Bob Gilder each won four official events in 2002, the
fewest number of victories to lead the Champions Tour since Jim
Colbert and Bob Murphy each had four wins in ’95.
Irwin, who became the first two-time Toshiba champion, entered the
final round last year with a three-stroke lead and won by five shots,
a larger margin of victory than the past six Toshiba champions
combined.
For Irwin, who won $225,000 for his 2002 Toshiba title, winning
last year’s event marked the 12th time in his career that he has won
a tournament at least twice.
Last year, Irwin played in 27 events and said this year would be
about the same.
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