Golf: Pelican Hill celebrating 10 years on earth
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Richard Dunn
It’s hard to fathom that Pelican Hill Golf Club is 10 years old.
It seems like only yesterday when Tom Fazio and Donald Bren and a
bunch of Irvine Co. big shots hosted a grand opening on a golf course
(now called the Ocean South course) on land (now called Newport Coast)
never before trampled on by mankind.
Back then, in November 1991 when yours truly was still warming up to
the idea of scripting a weekly golf column, it was the first big thing
that happened to me on the watch.
A former colleague of mine, Pat Larkin, who once wrote about golf in
these pages, toured Pelican Hill during the groundbreaking and inspected
the then-new high-end daily fee resort course when only dirt grazed the
fairways and greens.
But, lucky me, the job got handed over before Pelican Hill actually
opened, and, when it came time for grand openings, voila! Guess who
covered the luncheon and subsequent golf outing?
That’s right. A guy new on the beat, who, frankly, wasn’t a golfer at
the time and was unable to get off the tee, played Pelican Hill’s
brand-new course by the Pacific Ocean.
Poor Bill Mitchell, the Irvine Co. executive who was unfortunate
enough to get paired with me in a foursome that also included Times
sportswriters (most of them laughing their heads off at my sideways
distance off the tee).
While I must admit I eventually discovered the bug a few years later
and began seeing shots actually rise in the air and go relatively
straight, the grand opening was a day I’ll never forget.
I had little business even playing the course, reserved for players
capable of hitting over deep canyons from hillside tee boxes. I was not
one of those players, but Mitchell & Co. held it together. I learned a
lesson that day in “keeping up” and not slowing down a group, even if it
meant jogging to retrieve a golf ball.
There are career milestones to remember, but this one was a baptism in
golf and a diamond in the rough.
Fazio, the golf course architect, also designed the Links Course
(later named the Ocean North course), which opened in November 1993. Bren
is chairman of the Irvine Co.
One of the goals for Pelican Hill was to host a major golf tournament,
which it accomplished in December 1999, when the Diners Club Matches were
played there.
Pelican Hill also hosted the event in 2000, when it was called the
Hyundai Team Matches (now contested at Monarch Beach Golf Links in Dana
Point). The Irvine Co. decided to no longer host the made-for-television
event.
During last year’s Hyundai Matches, John Jacobs of the Senior PGA Tour
said of Pelican Hill: “This golf club is magnificent. If this club is 36
holes (which it is) and it was a private club, it would probably cost $1
million to join.”
Considering how paying customers are getting harder to come by these
days for high-end public golf courses, maybe Jacobs has a good idea.
Tom Watson, also of the Senior Tour, said the greens on the Ocean
North course played like “mountain greens,” because of the slopes. “It’s
a big golf course, and the greens have subtle contours. They’re hard to
read. But it’s a beautiful golf course,” he added.
To honor its 10th year, Pelican Hill signed nearly 800 members to its
10-year anniversary program of special benefits and privileges.
Membership in the 10th Anniversary Club is available to anyone for a
fee of $50 and offers a variety of benefits, including: $150 green fees
on Sunday; 20% off range balls and merchandise in the golf shop;
invitations to special events for club members; membership in Southern
California Golf Association for handicap posting services; and a
commemorative bag tag. Details: (949) 760-0707.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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