Farewell to Tea Cup Classic
- Share via
RICHARD DUNN
Clear the path. Rev up the mowers. Grab a rake. This golf course will
never be the same.
For the first time known to mankind in the Newport-Mesa community,
the best of both worlds have joined forces in the revamped Jones Cup.
Circle Aug. 18 on your calendar. Newport Beach Country Club. Tee
time, 1 p.m.
With the official ending of the Tea Cup Classic after seven years
-- tissue, anyone? (since yours truly started the event in 1997) -- a
bigger, brighter format has evolved with the venerable local
championship for ladies only joining the Jones Cup, which will
feature four foursomes.
Each of the four private country clubs in the Newport-Mesa
community -- Newport Beach Country Club, Big Canyon Country Club,
Mesa Verde Country Club and Santa Ana Country Club -- will be given
formal invitations to the summer blockbuster, the ultimate community
team pro-am with a staff professional playing with (presumably) the
club’s men’s, women’s and senior champions.
Not every club has a senior champion, so a player 50 or older will
be invited by the club to join the group in the Jones Cup.
The former Tea Cup Classic and Jones Cup were originally designed
to give local club champions a showcase event in which to play in
front of club members, family and friends, while bringing the golf
community closer together and promoting women’s golf.
Since the majority of the Tea Cup Classic participants continually
requested playing with a pro or a partner to take away some of the
pressure, it is the perfect golf marriage. The experience of
competing in front of a gallery, some a rolling crowd in the
150-to-200 range, was never easy for most of the women.
Official closure of the Tea Cup Classic will come following the
revamped Jones Cup on Aug. 18, when the former Tea Cup Classic and
Jones Cup trophies will be retired. The names of the winners of the
Tea Cup and previous Jones Cup, however, will be engraved on the new
trophy.
Big Canyon Country Club, which claimed three straight Jones Cup
titles in the four years under the old format of a men’s pro and
amateur best ball, will be presented the retired Jones Cup trophy and
Santa Ana Country Club’s Marianne Towersey, who won five of seven Tea
Cup Classic titles, will be awarded the everlasting Tea Cup trophy.
Today’s column represents a so long, farewell to the venerable Tea
Cup Classic, which provided great golf drama from ’97 through last
summer, when Towersey captured her fifth crown at Mesa Verde Country
Club.
It was an event started from scratch by this newspaper’s former
golf columnist, with the immediate assistance from GreenStripe
Media’s Joe Winkelmann, who represents Fletcher Jones Motorcars and
offered to get involved from Day One. This year’s format change came
suddenly, but Winkelmann adjusted quickly and continues to be a solid
drum-beater with even bigger and better ideas to come in the future.
So, yes, saying goodbye isn’t always easy, but you do your best
and move forward. The Tea Cup Classic will always have a special
place in my heart.
The women’s club champions, mind you, will continue to be
spotlighted every summer in the Jones Cup; this time playing more
aggressively, with less pressure, in the new foursomes format.
The public is invited.
* RICHARD DUNN is the Daily Pilot Sports Editor.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.