ACE in the hole
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Paul Clinton
Bill Thompson ranks it as a crowning moment of his years hoofing and
swinging his way through a string of golf courses.
As a member of a pro-am foursome at this past weekend’s Memorial
Tournament, Thompson had played 17 holes of good golf before he would
play one phenomenal hole.
Thompson, the chief executive of Newport Beach-based Pacific
Investment Management Company, approached the final hole with his
team two strokes off the leaders.
The 57-year-old Thompson, playing with a 14 handicap, shot a
fairly solid round on the day, he said. He was playing with Alan
Lacy, the chairman and chief executive of Sears, Roebuck & Co., and
Dennis Burns, a senior partner at Morgan Stanley. Professional Len
Mattiace had also joined the team.
The team was high off eagling the second to last hole -- scoring
two under par, for those uninitiated with the game -- to bring them
to two shots behind the leaders. For the finale, a 175-yard par 3
hole, Thompson carefully chose a 5-iron club from his bag, aimed his
shot and let it rip.
“Len’s caddy yelled, ‘That’s got a chance,’” Thompson remembered
excitedly. “It bounced two times on the green and rolled and rolled,
then disappeared.”
Thompson froze.
Then he flung his club into the air.
Thompson’s hole in one had won them the tournament.
It was a spectacular, dramatic moment for Thompson, who
acknowledged that he has played better rounds of golf, but had never
won a tournament with a single shot.
It was a moment every sports enthusiast and athlete dreams about.
Hitting the game-winning home run in the bottom of the ninth.
Swooshing a three-pointer to win a basketball game with three seconds
on the clock.
“It was really exciting,” Thompson said. “I’ve never had a hole in
one.”
At that moment, Thomson was a golf hero. And he’ll have the memory
for as long as he steps up to a tee box for a golf shot.
Afterward, the tournament creator, famed pro Jack “the Golden
Bear” Nicholas, congratulated Thompson on his feat. The renowned
golfer signed Thompson’s card “Nice Going, Bill.”
Mattiace autographed the ball.
The tournament took place a week ago Tuesday, a few days before
the pros took the course at the Muirfield Village Golf Club in
Columbus, Ohio, for the PGA Tour event. Kenny Perry won the $700,000
purse after shooting a 275 over four rounds of play.
Thompson, who lives in Laguna Beach with his wife Nancy and three
children, joined PIMCO in 1993 after serving an 18-year career with
Salomon Brothers.
He has been active in the community, completing a three-year term
as chairman of the Hoag Hospital Foundation board. He has also played
in the annual Toshiba Senior Golf Classic.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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