Moving Wright along at Newport Beach
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Richard Dunn
Jeff Wright of Newport Beach Country Club came home early from a
recent Hawaiian vacation to play in a member/guest golf tournament,
and, on a few occasions, didn’t know what to do with an empty house
while his wife and kids stayed on the islands.
“I’m a bachelor this weekend,” Wright quipped. “What are you doing
tonight?”
Wright, a former Orange County Player of the Year in boys golf at
Corona del Mar High, will have plans Friday in Jones Cup III at Big
Canyon Country Club at 1 p.m. He will tee it up with Newport Beach
head professional Paul Hahn in the pro-am better-ball of partners
format.
“I know I still have some game, but I feel like I’m kind of
relying on my past glory,” Wright said. “I think the last tournament
that I won was the club championship at Dove Canyon two years ago.
It’s funny to see these stories in the paper about me. I don’t feel
I’m worthy.”
Wright, a Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer based on his stellar
prep career and a former UC Irvine standout, enjoyed a six-shot lead
after the second round of the 54-hole Newport Beach men’s club
championship this year, but was disqualified after a ruling that
occurred on the sixth hole of the opening round.
Wright couldn’t find his tee shot at No. 6, so he went back to hit
another ball. Then, just as Wright was hitting his second shot, his
partners found his first ball, which might have been rolled over by
the wheel of a golf cart.
Nevertheless, as Wright was coming down from his backswing to
launch a second tee shot, his partners were waving their arms in the
distance after finding his first ball.
“They technically found my ball before I struck my second shot,
that’s the rules interpretation,” said Wright, who made the mistake
of hitting his first ball, which prompted the disqualification.
“If I broke a rule, then (the disqualification) should stand. Paul
Hahn’s a great guy and he did the right thing. But I still don’t know
the right rule. It’s very technical and I still don’t have a clear
idea how I broke the rules. All I know is that a rule was broken by
hitting a second ball.”
Wright, however, has news for his opponents: “I’m looking forward
to next year,” said Wright, a seven-time junior champion at Newport
Beach who is trying to become the first to win a men’s club title and
junior championship at the club, after joining Newport Beach on his
own last year (his father, Jack, was a member for 30 years).
“I’m certain I can (win) it next year,” added Wright, invited by
Hahn to play in Jones Cup III. “It’s a little goal you have. I grew
up playing there (when it was called Irvine Coast Country Club in the
1970s), and that club means a lot to me. There’s a lot of history
there. Like Danny Bibb, I saw him (recently) at the member/guest
deal, and I used to look up to those guys. It was really something to
win the club championship. That’s why it hurt (to get disqualified
after 36 holes). But I tried to be a good sport about it.
“In the grand scope of things, it’s just a golf tournament. I’ve
got two kids, I’ve got a house (in Mission Viejo), an appraisal
business ... that’s the way life is. I just accept it and go on. I’m
actually doing a music CD right now, too.”
Wright, a pop music songwriter and singer, as well as an
accomplished golfer, triathlete and distance runner, has written and
produced 10 songs on his new CD. Wright spent 10 years in the music
industry before trying to make it again in golf, then finally his
real estate appraisal business took off like a titanium golf ball
ripped off the tee with a Big Bertha and suddenly playing weekends on
the Golden State Tour wasn’t so important with young children in the
house.
Now Wright’s back into the music world.
“I’m feeling really fulfilled,” Wright said. “Whether I strike a
big record deal, I don’t care. It’s just something to keep me going.
I’m not bashing my head against a wall to get a record deal. You just
do it for yourself ... and try to win a golf tournament, along with
family, business and triathlons.”
Wright, groomed on the golf course as an adolescent by the late
Ray Haines, a legendary former pro who taught Don Pooley and Gary
McCord, won the Southern California Junior Match Play Championship 20
years ago this summer at Santa Ana Country Club, his biggest win as a
prep and a victory that opened the door to several four-year
colleges. right played two years at Arizona State and two years at
UCI.
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