The champ is ready
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Richard Dunn
The challenges might be a little tougher for Hale Irwin this year,
but the 57-year-old international golf star is ready to conquer the
PGA Champions Tour again.
And especially the Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country
Club.
“[Toshiba Senior Classic Tournament Director] Jeff [Purser] has
told me that the excitement is building, and, certainly from my
perspective, Newport Beach and the Toshiba tournament have been very
kind to me,” Irwin said. “I’ve had great success there. I wouldn’t
expect that necessarily on that golf course, but for whatever reason,
I have had good success.
“It was a kickoff to a great year for me last year and hopefully
it will be the same this year. I’m looking forward to it very much
because it’s a great place to come and bring my family and all have a
great week.”
Realizing he isn’t getting any younger on a tour where most
winners are between 50 and 54, Irwin is the rock of the Champions
Tour. He’s not only the defending money leader for the third time in
his distinguished senior career, but Irwin’s the tour’s greatest
all-time money winner.
Irwin, who has made Newport Beach his personal stage with Toshiba
titles in 1998 and last year, captured the 2002 Toshiba Classic with
a tournament scoring record (17-under 196), a victory that elevated
him to the top of the money list on the tour and he never moved from
his perch on his way to a career-first $3-million season.
With the advancement in today’s golf technology, along with the
tour’s annual crop of 50-year-old rookies to push the veterans, Irwin
simply finds a way to continually improve his game.
“The players that have come on (tour) recently, and those yet to
come on, are going to be bringing great credentials,” Irwin said. “I
think it encourages me and along with others to have to step up and
play a little bit better. The challenges are more numerous and I
think it’s adding great depth and great excitement to the Champions
Tour.”
Last year, Irwin changed almost every club in his bag before
winning the Toshiba Classic for a second time. Before teeing off in
the first round, he 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.
Irwin, who was helped to the ’98 Toshiba title and course record
by the famous bunker rake at 17, needed no such assistance in winning
last year, his 34th career senior title 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, a three-time U.S. Open champion, entered the final round at
Newport Beach last year with a three-stroke lead and won by five
shots, a larger margin of victory than the past six Toshiba champions
combined. It was the 12th time in his career that Irwin won the same
tournament at least twice.
Never one to shy away from equipment change (including balls),
Irwin was at it again earlier this year.
“The impact technology has had in my game alone over the last,
let’s say, two weeks, I’m hitting the ball farther now than I ever
have,” Irwin said Feb. 11. “I think for all the players, I can’t
think of any exceptions, that are not hitting the ball farther now
than they ever have due in large part to technology. We are seeing
the rebound in the club head, the titanium heads and the graphite
shafts. Really, the ball does not stay on the club very long; hence,
you don’t have quite as much spin, you get a little bit of control on
the ball. And I know some people may disagree with this, but the ball
doesn’t curve as much ... you just take dead aim and fire at it ...
it’s taking many of our golf courses and making them very, very
short.”
Once Irwin gets past January, he’s usually set for the season on
equipment -- with a little tinkering here and there.
But the former University of Colorado football defensive back and
two-time All-Big Eight selection is approaching 2003 sort of like a
gridiron classic.
“The hardest part probably for me initially is to get settled with
the equipment,” Irwin said. “While I’m happy with it (now), there are
still some adjustments that I’m going to make and I don’t expect it
to be too much longer before I get that dialed in.
“Secondly, I think to try to continue forward with the momentum
that I had last year. You can almost look at it from another sort of
perspective. You can have a great first half, go in for halftime and
then come out flat as a board. That’s what I’m going to try to avoid.
I had a great year and finished well and we had a bit of a respite
from the tour, just long enough to rest a little bit, but not long
enough to really get away from it. At least I’ve spent a lot of
mental effort to try to keep myself going and keep the competitive
juices flowing.
“So I think for me, it’s going to be again to make sure I pace
myself and play when I’m ready to play and not play those weeks when
I might not be ready to play. There is a little difference there. I
played 27 Champions Tour events last year and I anticipate probably
something about the same this year. Although we have lost a few
tournaments, I think it’s not going to bother my schedule any. In
fact, it probably comes right into my schedule. So indications are at
least I’m hitting the ball this year. I’d like to get this tendinitis
or whatever it is in my elbow taken care of and out of the way so
it’s not such a constant reminder.
“But like any successful season, it comes right down to how are
you getting the ball in the hole? Are you hitting it close enough and
often enough and putting well enough to get yourself to the top of
the leader board? And thus far, I don’t have any reason to suspect
that things are going to change dramatically, no forecasts or
predictions. I feel good about the way things have started this
year.”
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