Toshiba drawing top 30
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The reasons are numerous why the Toshiba Senior Classic is so
attractive to players on the PGA Champions Tour, but a sense of
timing might top the list.
Timing as in time of year.
It’s early in the season for the players, their spirits are
renewed and competitive juices are flowing freely, like a smooth
fairway shot with a 3-iron and a breeze behind you.
No matter where they finished on the tour money list in 2002, all
is forgiven and forgotten. Following the February Florida swing, the
tour comes West, beginning in Mexico this week, then to Southern
California for the SBC Classic at Valencia and the Toshiba Classic
March 17-23 at Newport Beach Country Club.
The early player commitment list for this year’s Toshiba Classic,
once again star-studded, includes 30 of the top 31 from last year’s
money list. Isao Aoki, No. 31 on last year’s money list, has not
committed to play. That means for three straight years, the event has
drawn 30 of the top 31 players from the prior year’s money list, a
feat that even some major championships were unable to accomplish.
(There’s still time for Aoki to commit and give the Toshiba event a
perfect record with top-31 players.)
Even during years when the Toshiba Classic was the only event on
the West Coast, it still attracted a strong field -- no doubt also
because of the hefty purse (this year it’s $1.55 million) and
senior-friendly golf course at Newport Beach (6,584 yards).
“The Toshiba Senior Classic has always enjoyed enormous support
from the Champions Tour players,” Tournament Director Jeff Purser
said. “It’s very rewarding to us that the Champions Tour stars turn
out to our event in such great numbers. They are the reason this
event is so highly anticipated.”
The Toshiba event has placed No. 1 among non-major championships
on the tour in terms of strength of field in a study conducted by the
PGA Tour.
The event, which has drawn the top of the class no matter where it
has fit on the calendar, will even host Bruce Lietzke for the first
time this year.
Lietzke, who has never competed in the Toshiba Senior Classic, has
always played a limited schedule and performed well in his career. He
was the envy of the PGA Tour, never competing in more than 20 events
over the course of the year, but always finishing high enough to
retain his card with an exempt status.
Of the top seven money winners from last year, Lietzke played in
the fewest tournaments (22), while winning three events and earning
over $1.5 million. He ended seventh on the money list.
Defending Toshiba Classic champion Hale Irwin heads an impressive
list of committed players for the 2003 event, a field that also
includes Tom Watson, Tom Kite, Fuzzy Zoeller, Gary McCord, Lee
Trevino, Ray Floyd, Ben Crenshaw, Larry Nelson, Allen Doyle, John
Jacobs, Dave Stockton, Jim Colbert, Bruce Fleisher, Doug Tewell, Jim
Thorpe and Lanny Wadkins.
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Several golf fans will be inside the ropes during the championship
rounds of the Toshiba Classic, and some will even be swinging clubs.
The Toshiba Classic will host a new Honorary Observer contest in
conjunction with two sponsors.
Winners will be allowed to walk inside the ropes with a marquee
pairing of Champions Tour players.
There will be two winners for each day of championship play (March
21-23), a total of six winners. Each winner can also bring one guest
inside the ropes.
Those six winners will join 44 others in the Cadillac Hole-in-One
Challenge on the 18th hole at Newport Beach Country Club following
the final round of play. The participants, who will be firing at a
green encircled by skyboxes and a Sunday crowd, all get one shot at
the hole. The first to make a hole-in-one will win a new Cadillac
Escalade.
If nobody wins the car, a $500 consolation prize will be awarded
to the golfer who is closest to the pin.
Each participant will tee off from a temporary tee set up at the
18th fairway approximately 160 yards from the hole (not the official
18th tee that’s 510 yards away from the green). Each participant
receives two tickets to Sunday’s final round.
“We expect this to be a popular promotion,” Purser said. “We’ve
never had fans inside the ropes for 18 holes, let alone shooting for
the same 18th pin that just challenged the pros.”
For details on the contest or tickets for the event: (949)
660-1001 or log on to www.ToshibaSeniorClassic.com.
*
Two local pros, Eric Woods of Newport Beach and Bryan Saltus of
Costa Mesa, are playing again on the Canadian Tour.
After two events, Saltus is 42nd on the money list at $1,760,
while Woods, a two-time Order of Merit champion on the tour (1993 and
‘94), came home without a paycheck last week.
*
Former Corona del Mar High golf standout Chad Towersey, a regular
on the Southern California Golf Association championship circuit, is
a host on Fox Sports Net’s “54321,” a show focusing on extreme sports
and interviews with those athletes.
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