Golf: A shining spotlight for Big Canyon
Richard Dunn
It was a near-perfect setting with Big Canyon Country Club hosting
its most prestigious golf championship ever.
In a relaxed environment with an intimate feel along the front of the
clubhouse, Big Canyon showed the United States Golf Association what
Dennis Harwood and other club members have believed for years.
That Big Canyon, despite its lofty reputation as Orange County’s most
exclusive private club and a place where members prefer anonymity, can
handle the national spotlight and provide the USGA with an even bigger
championship, like the U.S. Men’s Amateur or U.S. Junior Amateur.
While Big Canyon is not equipped to host 10,000 people, it is ideal
for 500 or less.
In addition to thwarting a public relations disaster with last week’s
damaged greens caused by vandals, USGA and Big Canyon officials operated
the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship like it was the most important
golf event on the planet.
“It may not get the galleries or television (coverage), but the USGA
is going to run this (championship) just like the U.S. Open,” said
Harwood, the event’s co-chairman with Lee Merrick.
Harwood, a Big Canyon member since the equity-owned club opened its
doors in 1971, was part of a group that felt Big Canyon would be better
served hosting a high-profile event, instead of lowering its shades to
the public or any outside attention.
“We’ve kind of kept the club a secret,” Harwood said, “but to
establish it as one of the finest (golf courses), you have to have the
best play it (and) you need to host an event.”
Tiger Woods has been an honorary member since 1992 and has been known
to give impromptu golf clinics to Big Canyon members. But that was
hush-hush outside of the club’s confines, until Harwood and the USGA
convinced enough members it was OK to publicize such a fact.
Prior to Sunday when Ellen Port of St. Louis, Mo., defeated Anna
Schultz in the championship match, the club had played host to only three
non-club tournaments: A qualifying round for the 1987 U.S. Amateur, the
1990 Big West Conference Championship and 1996 Pac-10 Conference
Championship (won by Stanford’s Woods, who shot a course-record 61 in the
first round).
Big Canyon has been the antithesis of a media-conscious golf club. For
example: There were no pre-event news releases or publicity pieces
regarding the ’96 Pac-10 Championships featuring the then-Stanford
sophomore phenom, who would play his last competitive round of golf in
Orange County. There were no phone calls from Big Canyon to get reporters
out for coverage.
It was as if Big Canyon didn’t want anybody to know about it, for
fear, perhaps, of too much outside traffic trampling on the grounds.
But members like Harwood and Merrick worked hard to change Big
Canyon’s image slightly and lobbied to host the 2000 U.S. Women’s
Mid-Amateur, which proved successful on all accounts, from the players
and their families to the club members, from the USGA to the local golf
community.
Aside from vandals ruining three greens during off hours before the
event, it was a great championship played on a great golf course.
“You need good iron shots and good course management here. You have to
do that on this golf course,” said Port, the stroke-play medalist and
match-play champion who knocked out local favorite Marianne Towersey
(Santa Ana Country Club) in the Round of 16.
Port, who captured her third U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur title following
victories in 1995 and ‘96, became the first three-time winner in the
championship’s 14-year history. She also became only the second medalist
to win the match-play championship. Carol Semple Thompson of Sewickley,
Pa., pulled off the rare double at Allegheny Country Club in 1990.
Harwood, a Newport Harbor High basketball player in the 1950s with
Denny Fitzpatrick, worked for the USGA as a rules official in the early
1990s. In 1992, he began negotiating with the USGA to hold an event at
Big Canyon.
But Harwood first had to convince eight other board members at the
club that it would be a good thing. He was right.
Harwood also said that 21 of the top 50 women amateurs in the world,
including college players, played in the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur,
according to Golf Week’s rankings.
The 2001 U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship will be played at Fox
Run Golf Club in Eureka, Mo. In 2002, Eugene Country Club in Eugene,
Ore., will be the host site.
The field of women (25 and over) was interesting in the USGA
championship at Big Canyon.
There was a doctor (Sally Krueger of San Francisco), a lawyer (Pamela
Palmieri of Granite Bay, Calif.), a nurse (Judith Allan Kryrinis of
Toronto, Canada), an analytical chemist (Carolyn Klecker of Eden Prairie,
Minn.) and a chemistry professor at UC Berkeley (Cynthia Friend of Palo
Alto).
Debbie Dahmer of Escondido is a disc jockey and caddies on the
celebrity tour and on the PGA Tour for celebrity pro-ams.
There were several teachers and coaches in the field, including Port,
a high school physical education teacher who coaches boys golf and girls
field hockey in St. Louis.
Towersey is a golf coach at Newport Harbor High.
Port earned medalist honors after shooting 147 (72-75) on the
5,972-yard, par-72 layout during stroke play. But Towersey still holds
the women’s course record at Big Canyon with a 69, accomplished April 25
while playing as a guest.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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