Jacobs turning on the charm
John Jacobs has become the PGA Champions Tour’s new dancing king.
Sure, Chi Chi Rodriguez is still around and Lee Trevino might show
the crowd a move or two if he’s in a good mood and shooting low
scores, but these days you can count on Jacobs to entertain the
crowd.
Jacobs, usually in tournament contention, could also be billed as
the tour’s Mr. Personality, instead of Fuzzy Zoeller, but it’s
Jacobs’ dances-on-the-greens that are making fans in the gallery buzz
at Newport Beach Country Club, site of the Toshiba Senior Classic.
Jacobs, who finished in a tie for third at 11-under 202 with defending Toshiba champion Hale Irwin and 2001 Toshiba winner Jose
Maria Canizares, will always be remembered in Toshiba lore for his
twinkle-toe dance and subsequent imitation of Rodriguez’s “sabre
dance” before finishing with a backward somersault on the first
playoff hole in 1999 at 18 after chipping from 90 feet out for eagle.
Gary McCord went on to win a five-hole playoff that year, but the
antics between Jacobs and McCord fired up the entire senior tour that
year, according to some.
Jacobs might be the most animated player on the tour. No doubt
he’s underrated. As a showman and a player. Everyone talks about Chi
Chi and Fuzzy and whoever else, but Jacobs is the real show out
there.
In the final round Sunday at the par-3 17, Jacobs sank a birdie
putt to move to 11-under, and what followed was a Monster Mash dance,
with Jacobs holding his arms in the air with his body shaking.
After making his par putt at 18, Jacobs was at it again, acting
like an old man, hunched over while spinning around in a circle on
the green, a la Bob Hope.
When asked about the dances, Jacobs quipped: “I’m just happy to
get the (bleeping) thing in the hole.”
*
While attendance was down Sunday from past final rounds of the
Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country Club, local police
and paramedics were kept busy, responding to at least four calls and
making one arrest.
The Newport Beach Fire Department treated a person who became sick
in a skybox at the 18th hole and later an elderly woman in the
parking lot after the tournament. Neither were taken to Hoag
Hospital.
Police, however, arrested a juvenile for shoplifting in the pro
shop Sunday and later detained a young man on the sidewalk with a
golf cart along West Coast Highway off the Newport Beach Country Club
grounds. Newport Beach police officer Lloyd Whisenant said only one
arrest was made Sunday during the tournament.
About midday, eyewitnesses said a woman was taunting police while
intoxicated outside of the clubhouse. She was not arrested, according
to tournament security.
*
During Sunday’s live telecast on CNBC, the station aired a
promotion to buy tickets for the Toshiba Senior Classic at 4:40 p.m.
when eventual champion Rodger Davis was heading to the 18th green.
*
In addition to his knickers, Davis wears personalized red socks
with white diamonds on each side. In the diamonds are the letters
that spell his first name [his first name is stitched on the left
side of each sock, and his last name on the right side].
*
For the first time all week, the temperature dropped below 60
degrees late in the afternoon Sunday. When Davis was still
celebrating at 6 p.m., it was 59 degrees with winds 10-15 mph.
*
Longtime Toshiba Classic volunteer Brian Carter, a retired judge
who has lived in Cameo Highlands since 1962, said the reason he keeps
coming back to volunteer is because of how well tournament officials
and players treat him.
“They treat us very well here,” said Carter, who used to volunteer
at two tournaments in Las Vegas, but quit both because of how
official managed the volunteers. “Here, they know they couldn’t run
this tournament without us and they treat us that way.” Carter is the
chairman of the leader boards.
*
Speaking of volunteers, standard bearers co-chairs Gordie Fitzel
and Randy Loats got an assist from Tamar Weinstein when she suggested
putting small American flags on each of the standard bearers
throughout Sunday’s final round. It was a big hit. “Everyone was
talking about them and saying what a nice touch it was,” Loats said.
*
No attendance figures were released by the tournament, but the
crowds were definitely lower this year than past Toshiba Classic
events.
“I’m surprised the crowd’s so small,” Newport Beach Country Club
head pro Paul Hahn said Sunday. “Maybe people were feeling guilty or
something if they go somewhere. Who knows why [attendance was down]?”
Added Newport Beach member Janice Sauter, one of the club’s top
female players: “Yeah, the crowd’s not very big at all. I’m amazed
it’s so small. But it’s beautiful and it’s a perfect golf course to
walk.”
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