Team golf will be at its finest
BRYCE ALDERTON
It’s only two weeks away.
Again, to encourage galleries and to ingrain in everyone’s brains,
the refurbished, revamped, retooled, whatever-”re”-word-you-want-
to-attach, Jones Cup will debut at 1 p.m. Aug. 18 at Newport Beach
Country Club.
This will be big. The grandest community golf spectacle
Newport-Mesa has seen.
Golf, most often referred to as an individual sport and rightfully
so, will turn into a team game, ala the Ryder Cup.
A group of three amateurs and one golf professional from each of
the four private clubs in Newport-Mesa -- Big Canyon Country Club,
Santa Ana Country Club, Mesa Verde Country Club and Newport Beach --
will bond together for an afternoon of 18 holes on the same course
that hosts the Toshiba Senior Classic each March.
Things could change in the next 14 days, but the lineups for each
club are firmly established.
Here they are: Newport Beach Country Club -- head golf
professional Paul Hahn, senior club champion George Dahl, men’s club
champion Jeff Wright, women’s club champion Debbie Albright; Mesa
Verde Country Club -- women’s club champion Akemi Khaiat, men’s club
champion Dave Irwin, senior club champion Steve Rhorer, head pro Tom
Sargent; Big Canyon Country Club -- Director of Golf Bob Lovejoy,
men’s club champion Will Tipton, women’s club champion Sally
Holstein, senior club champion Steve Collins; Santa Ana Country Club
-- women’s club champion Marianne Towersey, men’s club champion Bill
Welch, senior club champion Boyd Martin, head pro Geoff Cochrane.
Each foursome will count its two best balls out of four for each
hole, which will involve more players and should make for some gutsy
golf, as Irwin explained.
“If you have a 30-foot birdie putt and your partner has already
made par, you can be a lot more aggressive with your putt than you
might tend to be,” Irwin said.
In speaking with several of the players, most, if not nearly all
of them said, the format will take the pressure off.
This is most true of the ladies, who were used to 18 holes of
stroke play in the seven prior Tea Cup Classics. They didn’t have
partners, like the men did in the Jones Cup, to provide a support
system should they falter in their games.
In the former Jones Cup, an amateur from each of the four clubs,
usually the men’s club champion, paired with a golf professional of
that club. One best ball of the two was counted for each hole.
If one guy had a bad hole, his partner could pick up the slack and
the team wouldn’t suffer.
The same is true this year, just on a larger scale.
The Jones Cup has grown up.
It is now the ultimate in team golf.
And why players might say the new format will take some pressure
off, come the back nine, I’m willing to bet there will be a few legs
wobbling slightly over those 3-foot putts.
Now, more than ever for community golf in this area, players will
feel even more allegiance to their respective club.
Marianne Towersey, winner of five Tea Cup Classic titles, said
Sunday that Santa Ana should pick a team color.
What a great idea.
“We want the team spirit to spread. We want to get people from
[Santa Ana Country Club] cheering us on,” Towersey said.
The same goes for all the clubs and beyond. Galleries are warmly
welcomed.
OK, who wants red? Green? Blue?
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.