Win streak ends for Big Canyon
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Rick Devereux
The streak ends.
The members of Big Canyon Country Club have won the Jones Cup the
past three years. The host members of Newport Beach Country Club put
an end to Big Canyon’s power hold on the top community golf prize by
shooting a 5-under-par 66. Big Canyon and Santa Ana Country Club both
finished at 2-under, and Mesa Verde Country Club finished at 1-under.
The only other time Big Canyon did not win the Jones Cup was in
2000, the inaugural year of the event and also held at Newport Beach
Country Club. Since then the site has rotated to the different venues
and Big Canyon was victorious every time. But Wednesday marked the
return to Newport Beach and halted the hopes of Big Canyon’s Director
of Golf Bob Lovejoy of claiming a title on each course.
“I really wanted to win at each club,” Lovejoy said after the
round. “The only one I haven’t won on is this one.”
The Jones Cup had a revised format this year, pitting the golf
pro, men’s champion, senior champion and women’s champion of each
club in a best-ball competition where the best two scores on each
hole are counted.
Lovejoy teamed with men’s champion Will Tipton (the two won Jones
Cup IV at Mesa Verde last year), senior champion Steve Collins and
women’s champion Sally Holstein.
The new scoring system, plus the fact that the various teams
sported matching shirts, created a more relaxed atmosphere.
“I love it,” Holstein said. “Instead of playing head-to-head and
every stroke counting [like in the former Tea Cup Classic], this is
great.”
Collins said, “It’s fun to see the clubs in the different colors.
I think it’s great for the community and is really a lot of fun to
play in.”
While it was more relaxed, the golfers were still focused on
winning.
Collins made a birdie on the first hole to put the team at
1-under, and when no one could do better than par on the second,
Lovejoy realized one goal was gone.
“I guess we won’t birdie every hole,” he told Tipton.
Collins also had high hopes for the start of the tournament.
“I would have liked to start birdie-birdie, but I’ll take
birdie-tap-in,” he said.
Lovejoy had the team thinking victory after a 30-foot birdie putt
on the par-5 No. 3 slowly rolled to its destination.
That putt would be one of the few putts the Big Canyon team was
able to correctly gauge, while most birdie and even a few par
attempts were inches off.
After three pars, including a beautiful chip from Lovejoy on the
fifth hole to get a tap-in, No. 7 signified a turn of events for the
foursome.
Tipton birdied the hole, but Lovejoy lost his ball when his
approach shot got stuck in a palm tree.
“I’ve never had that happen to me before,” Lovejoy said. “I didn’t
think [the shot] would get up that quick.”
Holstein and Collins bogeyed the hole to keep the team at 2-under,
but it seemed like the swings got a little stiffer and the tension
mounted slightly, especially since the scores of the other clubs
showed all four within two shots of each other.
Lovejoy parred the eighth hole, but the other three shot bogeys to
drop them to 1-under. The group stayed at that position until the
12th hole, when Lovejoy again was the lone par shooter. Tipton had a
birdie putt break right and his par attempt lipped out, and Collins’
par putt broke left of the hole, dropping the team to even par for
the day.
Collins birdied the 15th and Holstein birdied the 16th to drop Big Canyon to 2-under, but Newport had made a run on the last three holes
to improve to 5-under.
But the missed opportunities lingered after the tournament was
complete.
“The putts didn’t fall today,” Tipton said. “We didn’t make the
birdie putts when we needed to and Newport turned it on at the end to
run away from everyone.”
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