Bryce AldertonEvents and happenings at the Toshiba...
Bryce Alderton
Events and happenings at the Toshiba Senior Classic:
A private gathering will be held at 6 p.m. today in memory of
Chris Premer, the former media director for the Toshiba Senior
Classic.
Premer was killed in a plane crash three miles from the Ontario
Airport in Norco Oct. 1 , just 11 days before his 31st birthday.
Family members, tournament officials and media will gather to
refect on Premer’s life and contributions to the tournament.
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Champions Tour players are raving about the course conditions and
how much they look forward to returning to NBCC.
Course Superintendent Ron Benedict and his crew have the poa annua
greens rolling smoothly, the perennial rye fairways mowed evenly and
the rough nearing 2 1/2 inches thick.
Several golfers praise the course as one of the few remaining on
tour that is of the “old style,” meaning tree-lined, narrow fairways,
small greens and a holes that butt up to one another. There isn’t
much distance between the green of one hole and the tee of another.
“All the guys look forward to coming here,” said Fuzzy Zoeller,
who finished tied for 15th in 2002 and also competed here last year.
“It is not to much the length that is a factor, but the small
greens and small targets. Anybody in the field has an opportunity to
win, which is great. This is what the Champions Tour was made of
before the monsters we are playing on now.”
The par-71 layout measures 6,571 yards this week and was
originally designed by William Bell. Subsequent -- though not too
drastic -- changes were developed by Harry Rainville and Ted
Robinson.
Chi Chi Rodriguez has played in eight of the nine prior
tournaments and made no doubts as to what Champions Tour course was
his favorite.
“[NBCC] is the best course on the Champions Tour,” Rodriguez, 68,
said. “The holes are narrow, the greens are good and you don’t have
to drive it far to win here. Anyone who tees it up has a shot at
winning. It gives Grand-Champions players like me a chance.”
The Grand Champions program is open to all golfers ages 60 and
older who are entered into full-field Champions Tour events. Scores
posted during the first two rounds of the event [Friday and Saturday]
determine the winner of the “tournament within a tournament.” Grand
Champions earnings do not count toward the Champions Tour official
money list.
There are 12 Champions Tour events that feature Grand Champions
competition, but Toshiba is not one of them.
Jerry McGee, 60, has played in all nine prior Toshiba Senior
Classics, earning $44,718 in that time, and will compete again this
year.
“This is a fun golf course to play,” McGee said.
Hajime Meshiai, making his Champions Tour debut at this week’s
tournament, played the course twice last week and has been out the
first two days.
“I look forward to playing here,” Meshiai said through an
interpreter. “There are fast greens with undulations. The course is
in great condition and is a beautiful layout.”
Greens generally break toward the Pacific Ocean with the most
severe being the par-4 seventh hole, which measures 368 yards.
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Jack Nicklaus is scheduled to tee off on the 10th hole at 12:45
p.m. today in the first of two Pro-Am days.
The Golden Bear is then slated to start on No. 1 in Thursday’s
Pro-Am at 7:15 a.m.
The Pro-Ams are open to the public and give spectators a chance to
see the legendary golfer -- making his first appearance at Newport
Beach Country Club -- in a less-crowded setting than during the
three-day tournament which begins with Friday’s first round.
Single-day tickets cost $15.
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