Toshiba Senior Classic Golf: It’s tournament time
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Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Almost any professional golfer can catch fire for a
weekend and win the eighth annual Toshiba Senior Classic, which opens for
Senior PGA Tour members today in the first round at Newport Beach Country
Club.
“It’s whoever gets hot,” said veteran Larry Ziegler, who should know,
considering how his sizzling putter propelled him to second place at the
Senior Tour National Qualifying Tournament last fall, becoming the second
oldest player at 62 to earn an exemption at Q School, after he lost his
card last year.
Ziegler, one of 78 pros in one of the tour’s strongest fields today
through Sunday, said Tom Watson, Hale Irwin and long hitter John Jacobs
should be some of the guys to watch atop the leader board this weekend.
But Ben Crenshaw, one of the most anticipated rookies on the Senior
Tour in 2002, could finally be a factor, since Newport Beach is one of
the few golf courses with which he’s familiar.
“At least it’s one of the few golf courses I’ve played,” said
Crenshaw, who is still trying to find his swing since playing a limited
PGA Tour schedule the past few years.
Crenshaw, 78th on the Senior PGA Tour money list after three events at
$17,520, and Fuzzy Zoeller -- the tour’s other marquee rookie with major
championships to his credit -- have both struggled since the season
started.
But Crenshaw, a part-time Dana Point resident who has played several
rounds at Newport Beach with club president Jerry Anderson, said he has
watched the Toshiba the last three years on television.
“Some people think the scores should be lower, upon looking at the
golf course, but it doesn’t end up that way,” Crenshaw said after his
pro-am round Thursday. “You’ve got to place the ball well on these
greens. It’s a nice little defense for the golf course. Jerry Anderson
always says it looks like you can tear it apart (at only 6,584 yards, the
shortest on the Senior Tour), but the scores aren’t as low as you’d
think.”
Added Ziegler: “For a short golf course, the greens are a great
equalizer ... you won’t see a bad putter here as the winner. The greens
get you crying pretty quick. The golf course is in great shape, too. The
rain helped tremendously, because it’ll soften the greens ... the greens
here will bring you to your knees.”
The tournament’s official weather report for today mostly sunny skies
with temperatures in the mid-60s and 5-to-10 mph southwest winds.
In other words, ideal conditions.
“The golf course is in great shape,” Irwin said Thursday. “It’s
probably in its best shape since I’ve played here (every year since
Newport Beach took over as host in 1996, after Mesa Verde Country Club
held the inaugural Toshiba Classic in ‘95, one year before Irwin was
eligible for the 50-and-over circuit).”
The Toshiba Senior Classic, widely considered one of the best stops on
tour, has featured playoffs in three of the past five years and
one-stroke victories every year except one (1996, when Jim Colbert won by
two strokes).
Jose Maria Canizares, who beat Gil Morgan in a nine-hole playoff last
year, is the defending champion.
Second-round action is Saturday, with the final round Sunday.
For the second year in a row, the Toshiba Classic has attracted 30 of
the top 31 money leaders from the previous year, a fact usually reserved
for major championships.
But the purse ($1.5 million), timing of the event (early in the season
and the second of a three-stop California swing) and traditional style
golf course are a few of the reasons why players like coming here.
George Archer won the first Toshiba Classic, followed by Colbert, Bob
Murphy in 1997, Irwin in ‘98, Gary McCord in ‘99, Allen Doyle in 2000 and
Canizares last year.
Murphy won a nine-hole playoff over Jay Sigel, McCord beat Jacobs in a
memorable five-hole playoff and Irwin shot a course-record 62 on Sunday
to come from five strokes back and leapfrog past 11 players to win.
Irwin was also helped at 17 by the Famous Bunker Rake, which stopped
his ball from rolling into a lake, allowing him to get up and down for
par on his way to victory.
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