Ready to rip it
Bryce Alderton
Steve Rhorer was just trying to win the Mesa Verde Country Club men’s
championship last August. Little did he know he would break a streak.
The 54-year-old Costa Mesa resident out-dueled the rest of the
Mesa Verde field by shooting 70-72-74--216 to unseat Pete Daley
(74-74-75--223), who had won four consecutive club championships.
Daley teamed with Tom Sargent, Mesa Verde’s head professional, to
claim the inaugural Jones Cup in 2000.
Rhorer will partner with Sargent for Jones Cup IV, scheduled for
1:30 p.m. Friday at Mesa Verde.
“We are good friends who enjoy competing against each other,”
Rhorer said, referring to Daley. “I was gunning to win [the club
championship] and felt great about it. There were many fine players.”
Rhorer had won a club championship at Virginia Country Club in
Long Beach, where he was a member prior to moving to Mesa Verde three
years ago.
He said his game was better at the same time last year.
“I played very well in the club championship last year and fared
better in tournaments,” Rhorer said.
This year Rhorer missed qualifying for the Southern California
Golf Association Mid-Amateur Championship, held at Mesa Verde in
August, by one shot and failed to gain entry into the California
Amateur Championship by three strokes.
He averaged 78 over three rounds in last year’s Southern
California Mid-Amateur, held at Big Canyon Country Club.
“I was happy with that, [because] Big Canyon is a difficult golf
course,” Rhorer said.
Beginning when he was 10, Rhorer took to the Recreation Park Golf
Course near his boyhood home in Long Beach.
“My mom kicked me out of the house to learn to play golf,” he
said. “For 25 cents you could get a big bucket of balls and learn the
grip and address position from a head pro. I started playing and
practicing with friends. You make friendships in golf.”
In 1968 Rhorer competed in the NCAA golf championships as a member
of UC Santa Barbara’s golf team. He graduated from UCSB in 1971 and
is now in the roofing distribution business.
He is married with three sons and takes the occasional lesson from
Sargent.
“[Sargent] is a student of the game who understands the golf
swing,” Rhorer said. “I’m looking forward to playing with him since
we don’t get a chance to play together very much.”
Accuracy off the tee and the ability to hit greens are two keys
Rhorer said the winning team will need to perform often in order to
win this year’s Jones Cup.
“It is hard to run the ball through the kikuyu grass,” Rhorer said
of Mesa Verde’s rough. “The more drives you can put in the fairway
and the more greens you can hit, the more opportunities to make
birdie.
“Mesa Verde is a good driving golf course that has some difficult
and easy holes. I think it helps playing on our home course.”
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