A new tour with some new twists
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Richard Dunn
Billed as the fan-friendliest organization in professional sports,
the PGA Champions Tour stops for the Toshiba Senior Classic at
Newport Beach Country Club with a new name, new agenda and new
attitude.
The former Senior PGA Tour changed its name to the Champions Tour
as part of the PGA Tour’s “rebranding” project.
The 50-and-over senior professional golf circuit, which started in
1980 with Arnold Palmer as the headliner, changed its name as part of
an overall strategy to unite the three tours under the PGA Tour brand
identity and to capitalize on the global strength of the PGA Tour’s
swinging golfer icon, which is incorporated into the new logos of
both tours.
PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem said the “rebranding of the
Senior Tour to the Champions Tour signifies a dynamic future
direction that coincides with the full implementation in 2003 of our
new platform that is bringing fans ‘inside the ropes’ while also
providing them with valuable game-improvement information.”
Among the fan friendly initiatives, which were new last year but
most not implemented until this year, include dropping the ropes
behind the final group. The Toshiba Senior Classic did that last year
after all three rounds on the final three holes, with the Saturday
and Sunday galleries fairly sizable.
“You’re walking right in there behind the players and watching
their shots,” Toshiba Classic Tournament Director Jeff Purser said.
“The sad thing about watching golf on TV is that you can’t really
tell if it’s a great shot, because TV is two-dimensional. The great
thing about dropping the ropes is that you get to stand right behind
them and watch their shots.”
Perhaps the most successful fan-friendly initiative last year at
the Toshiba Classic was the introduction of the post-round Q & A
session.
After the Saturday round, Purser rounded up Chi Chi Rodriguez and
Fuzzy Zoeller, who were miked up and sitting together high on a
scaffolding near the first tee. The crowd loved it.
This year, Purser announced that Gary McCord and John Jacobs will
entertain the crowd after the first round in a Q & A session with
fans, while Rodriguez and Zoeller will repeat their stage feat after
the second round.
Of the tour’s fan-friendly initiatives, it is up to each
tournament director to implement whatever feature(s) he or she sees
fit.
New this year for sponsors in hospitality tents is the chance to
wine and dine with a member of the Champions Tour.
Purser said if you wanted to invite a Champions Tour professional
to your tent for dinner, it could be arranged for the right price.
When asked what the going rate is for a pro to come to your corporate
villa and impress your guests and clients, Purser started to say it
would be different for each golfer.
“Then again, maybe if you’re Dave Stockton, and if you have really
good wine -- and we have a good (vintage) here -- maybe (the cost) is
nothing,” Purser told a group of sponsors. “I’m sure there are guys
who would do it for 15 or 20 minutes and there might not be a cost --
depending on how they played that day, of course. There are guys like
Bruce Fleisher and Gil Morgan who are just great guys ... I’ll go out
and recruit. I’ll do that for you.”
Other new initiatives at the Toshiba Classic this year include the
Honorary Observer contest, in which several golf fans will be inside
the ropes during the championship rounds. Some will even be swinging
clubs.
Winners of the Toshiba Classic Honorary Observer 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 the 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.”
There are new cart rules. Caddies are no longer permitted to ride
in a cart at any time during an official round, and bags are also
banned. Golf cart weather covers and heaters have also been axed.
The 2003 Champions Tour Golf Cart Rules and Guidelines stipulates
“a consistent no-cart provision in Champions Tour Major Championships
and the Champions Tour Championship. Players and caddies, however,
are allowed to ride in carts during pro-am and practice rounds.”
Other implementation of fan-friendly initiatives include the
“Caddie of the Day” promotion, in which a few lucky fans are selected
to serve as caddies in a pro-am. There is also a lottery to play with
Fuzzy Zoeller in the Monday Pro-Am.
Last year, players were miked up during rounds and gave television
interviews between shots.
“The secret to the interviews is probably to have somebody that
knows how to interview and knows when to interview,” defending
Toshiba champion and leading money winner Hale Irwin said. “Maybe it
should be the other way around. Know when to and what questions to
ask. We generally turn to other players for those interviews, just
more receptive to somebody who has been there rather than someone you
are not familiar with.
“There are certain problems that come about that I think have to
be dealt with. Maybe it’s just an eye contact with the announcer,
like ‘yes, I’m OK to have an interview now.’ You don’t want to be
interfered with by conversation and I think that move has to come
from the player first and that’s usually decided before you even tee
off ... all those initiatives are great. The interviews are great. I
think it gives a little insight as to what the player might be
thinking and I think it adds some appeal to the telecast.”
The tour also has a new station on first-round Fridays -- the Golf
Channel.
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