Making early magic
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Bryce Alderton
Whatever Gil Morgan is doing, it seems to be working this year.
The 57-year-old Edmond, Okla., resident has vaulted to the top of
this year’s Champions Tour money list ($495,121) with five top 10s in
five events, including his two-stroke victory over Larry Nelson at
last week’s SBC Valencia Classic. The win was Morgan’s 23rd on the
Champions Tour, sending him into a tie with Bob Murphy for fourth
all-time.
The victory also gave Morgan a 105-point lead in the season-long
Charles Schwab Cup standings over Craig Stadler. The standings are
designed to recognize the tour’s top player at the end of the year.
Morgan knows success at the Toshiba Senior Classic, which begins
today at Newport Beach Country Club.
He has finished in the top 10 in five of six events, including
losing a nine-hole playoff to Jose Maria Canizares in 2001.
“[NBCC] is pretty much like [Valencia Country Club] last week,”
said Morgan standing on the driving range Tuesday. “It is defined by
trees, the rough is deep and the greens are small.
“You have to get the ball up and down and make birdies.”
Morgan, who has cousins in Newport and Huntington Beach, has made
70 birdies in 15 rounds this year (4.67 average), good for fourth on
tour and ranks first with 32 birdies on 60 par-5 holes played.
Morgan is tied with Hale Irwin, the only two-time winner of the
Toshiba Senior Classic, for most sub-par rounds this season (13) and
leads in first-round scoring average (67.60).
The formula for success isn’t anything too complex for Morgan, who
holds a doctorate in optometry, although he has never practiced.
“It’s working harder and getting in better shape,” he said. “You
have to practice your weaknesses.
“Play has improved since I started the Champions Tour [eight years
ago]. There are more good players today than there has ever been.
[Joe Inman] shot a 64 last week and that wasn’t an easy 64.”
Morgan shot a final-round 69 to finish at 14-under-par (202), good
for a two-stroke victory last week, the greatest winning margin on
tour this season.
“I made a few putts,” said Morgan, who birdied Nos. 9, 10 and 11
in Sunday’s final round to build a two-shot lead heading into the
18th hole.
Inman’s 64 came in the final round of the SBC Classic and set a
competitive course record while sending him into a tie for fourth
(10-under-par) with Graham Marsh. Morgan and Marsh are paired in
today’s first round -- 9:27 a.m. starting time -- while Inman tees
off at 12:01 p.m.
Morgan’s victory at Valencia erased memories of the prior two
years, when last-hole heroics by Tom Purtzer and Tom Watson snatched
the title out of his grasp.
Morgan, winner of seven PGA Tour titles, can’t pinpoint a specific
area of his game that has taken him to the top so far this year, but
said a increased focus on an off-season fitness regimen could be
paying off.
“Everyone is becoming health-conscious over time in order to stay
[competitive],” Morgan said. “It’s working harder to get better and
get in golf shape.”
But even he has an indulgent side when it comes to chocolate chip
cookies.
“I rarely let any get away from me,” he said with a laugh.
So far this year, Morgan seems to have a firm hold on his golf
game.
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