ERIC WOODS
Richard Dunn
His game still has flickers of greatness, which keeps Eric Woods
coming back to the golf course, and, despite his age, his dreams
alive.
“I’m 39 and still have an opportunity to pursue my dream,” said
Woods, a Corona del Mar High and UC Irvine graduate who turned pro in
1988, but hasn’t played regularly in about six years since his
father, Richard, a longtime former Newport Beach Country Club member,
passed away.
At that point, Woods took over the family business, Cactus
Packaging, and his golf career took a back seat.
These days, Woods is in the midst of a mild comeback this year
after having played five mini-tour events and finishing no worse than
12th. He carded a smooth 63 earlier this year in a Golden State
Tour/Pro Series event at Brookside Golf Club in Pasadena, an
indication that recent hard work is paying off.
Once on the cusp of a promising career, Woods traveled the world
in search of a good time, which, if enough rounds in the 60s were
factored in, became a great time. “When I was playing professionally,
no one had as much fun as I was having,” Woods once said. “And I had
enough talent to make enough money to pay my bills.”
As a playing pro, Woods traveled to South Africa and South
America. He played on the Australian and Asia tours, then in 1993 and
‘94, he enjoyed back-to-back years of winning the Order of Merit, as
the money list is called, on the Canadian Tour. In ‘94, Woods led the
Canadian Tour in low-stroke average and captured two tournaments
north of border. His spot on the tour’s all-time money list continues
to open doors if he’s interesting in playing.
“I get to play in almost anything I want to play in [on the
Canadian Tour,]” said Woods, a former CdM football quarterback who
played golf in Canada earlier this year for the first time in quite
awhile.
“It’s so awesome,” Woods added. “You forget how nice professional
golf tournaments are; it’s your course when you get there. It’s roped
off, you get great balls on the driving range and all the balls you
want to hit, the golf course is in perfect shape and you’ve got
caddies, which is the way golf should be. It’s so fun. What I really
miss is a caddie. If I had it my way the rest of my life, somebody
would be carrying my bag. Unfortunately, right now, it’s me doing
it.”
Woods, who hasn’t played competitively on a full-time basis since
his father became ill in 1995, has kept the inherited business going,
while opening The Golf Lab in Costa Mesa, an indoor practice facility
which has been focusing lately on custom putter fitting and custom
junior golf club fitting.
“I love teaching and the technical side of golf,” Woods said. “I’m
intrigued with it and enjoy learning about equipment. I’m not so much
into changing adults’ equipment as I am with kids.”
At this point in his playing career, Woods isn’t trying to win any
more money titles, but he’d like to return to ’94 form. “I don’t care
if [the money] is Canadian. I’m going to play in anything where I
think I can make cash at,” said Woods, who has a 14-month-old son,
Daniel.
“It’s hard. I love golf and I feel I have the ability to make a
living playing golf. But, right now, it’s not realistic, because I’ve
got a lot of responsibility on my shoulders. I’m doing what I think
is right. It’s not wise to walk away from a profitable business.”
Woods, who won the South American Tour Order of Merit in 1992
after contending for the championship in five of seven events that
year, has never owned a PGA Tour card, but played in the 1987 LA Open
as an amateur and the 1991 AT&T; National Pro-Am at Pebble Beach in
1991.
A longtime CdM resident, Woods is the latest honoree in the Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame.
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