Golf: No more birdie vision
Richard Dunn
As the Toshiba Senior Classic grows a year older, the host site of
the Senior PGA Tour event, Newport Beach Country Club, is becoming more
refined.
The mature, tree-lined golf course, which opened in 1954 when it was Irvine Coast Country Club and is known for its gently rolling terrain,
will have a big surprise for members of the Senior Tour next month.
For the first time, the seniors will play the new 18th green at
Newport Beach, which underwent an extensive remodeling project last
summer and is bound to give golfers a more difficult time than in years
past.
The par-5 hole No. 18, which has historically played as one of the
easiest in the Toshiba Classic, will no longer induce visions of birdies.
In fact, the look of the hole from 100 yards in has completely
changed.
The green is now elevated and undulated, mounds have been added behind
it to give it some flash and new bunkers have been built.
A flower planter behind the green, on the side of a mound, proudly
displays the letters NBCC as players and visitors walk in from the
parking lot.
From the fairway, the clubhouse is no longer in the backdrop and a
stronger premium on placement is required.
“From 10-to-12 yards off the green, (the fairway) is about seven feet
lower than the putting surface,” Newport Beach Country Club President
Jerry Anderson said.
The hole’s distance is the same, 510 yards from the blue tees. But the
green at 18, raised about four feet in the back, now features mounds
behind it. The highest point is about 14 feet.
The club, committed to improving the golf course each year it hosts
the Senior Tour event, has completed other projects and planted 20 new
pine trees, but the change at 18 is the most dramatic.
No. 18 has ranked as the second-easiest hole on the course in four of
the five years the event has been played there, but starting this year,
golfers will have an uphill approach to 18 and a critical third shot to
the green.
“I think that’s a pretty big story,” tournament director Jeff Purser
said of the renovated finishing hole. “And the golf course looks
unbelievable right now.”
The seventh annual Toshiba Classic is Feb. 26 through March 4.
For the seventh year in a row, Pelican Hill Golf Club has been ranked
as operating one of the “top 100 golf shops in the nation” for resort
courses by Golf Shop Operations Magazine.
Pelican Hill opened its Ocean South Course November, 1991, then
introduced its second Tom Fazio-designed course, the Ocean North, two
years later.
Pelican Hill, owned by the Irvine Co., has hosted the Team Matches
from all three major tours in each of the last two Decembers.
Speaking of the Irvine Co., the Newport Beach-based property
development giant plans to open Shady Canyon Golf Course for play later
this year.
Shady Canyon, with its initiation membership price tag rumored to be
in the $200,000 range, is also designed by Fazio and located in a
secluded area of Irvine’s San Joaquin Hills.
According to the Irvine Co., the 300-acre project is expected to be
one of the most distinctive and scenic private courses in California.
Just under 400 custom homes and semi-custom villas are being
integrated into the area. Shady Canyon is incorporating permanently
protected open space into land adjacent to this lowest-density village in
Irvine.
Lots for custom homes alone are expected to go from $500,000 to $1
million.
It will be interesting how Shady Canyon affects other private clubs,
such as relatively nearby Big Canyon Country Club in Newport Beach, the
most exclusive club in Orange County.
Some Newport Beach residents, including Pete Daley (Mesa Verde Country
Club), are already planning to investigate Shady Canyon when it opens.
“I’ll obviously look there,” said Daley, the Mesa Verde men’s club
champion and 2000 Jones Cup participant. “Shady Canyon’s going to compete
with Big Canyon (for high-end memberships).”
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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