Defending Tea Cup Classic champion hoping to repeat
Richard Dunn
If ever a womenâs club champion stood tall on her home golf
course, it was last year for Debbie Albright of Newport Beach Country
Club in the Tea Cup Classic.
Albright, after finishing second three times, captured the
perpetual Tea Cup Classic trophy last year and celebrated on the 18th
green with friends and family members, who swarmed to congratulate
her in a memorable moment.
Now, as she prepares for Tea Cup Classic VI on Wednesday at Santa
Ana Country Club, Albright will be a first-time defending champion as
she squares off against Olivia Slutzky of Big Canyon Country Club,
Tea Cup newcomer Akemi Khaiat of Mesa Verde Country Club and
three-time Tea Cup champion Marianne Towersey of host Santa Ana.
Albright, who didnât return from vacation until a few days ago,
has become a star at Newport Beach with her seven consecutive club
titles. The vivacious blond, a hard-working, dedicated player
according to Newport Beach head professional Paul Hahn, broke club
championship records at Newport Beach in May for margin of victory
(36 strokes) and scoring (72-75-74-76--297). Albright was the first
to break 300 in a four-round womenâs championship at the club, while
posting four rounds in the 70s for the third consecutive year.
âI felt like I really played consistent this year (in the club
championship), and with an opening-round 72, that was an added
bonus,â Albright said. âWe have some great players at Newport Beach,
so I always feel l have to go out and give it my best ... itâs not
like itâs just given to you. You have to work at it.â
While Albright is a strong believer in the mental and
psychological aspects of the game, she said âit still comes down to
experienceâ in a competitive situation.
In last yearâs Tea Cup Classic, Albright played each of the last
four holes with a four-shot lead. She bogeyed the 18th hole and
concluded the round at 6-over-par 78, while runner-up Towersey
birdied the last hole to finish two shots off the pace.
Albrightâs tee shot at 18 found a bunker on the left side of the
fairway, but she couldnât get out with her 9-wood. Instead of
unraveling, she âjust focused on a good tempo to get out (with a
6-iron)â and survived her most difficult moment of the afternoon.
On the front nine last year, Albright made three pars in a row on
holes 3 through 5 to take a one-shot lead in Tea Cup Classic V. She
never lost the advantage.
Albright increased her lead to two strokes after making par on the
par-3 hole No. 8, while the Tea Cup fieldâs nearest competitor at the
time made bogey.
Albright, a mother of two young teenagers, still believes her golf
game is improving each year.
âI didnât start playing until I was 24 or 25, and golfâs a game in
which you keep on learning,â said Albright, 44. â(Improvement) is not
something that happens overnight. You have to work at it and play a
lot of competitions to get comfortable out there on the golf course.â
Although Albright is taking it one year at a time, sheâs now two
away from tying Dee Dee Whiteâs club record of nine consecutive
titles. White, the clubâs all-time leader with 17 club championships,
won nine straight from 1967 through â75.
Albright, whose title streak began in 1996, is originally from New
Zealand. Her husband, Jock, introduced her to golf.
Janice Sauter, who finished second in this yearâs womenâs club
championship at Newport Beach, will caddie for Albright in Tea Cup
Classic VI.
The event, which was started by this sports section in 1997, is
part of the Fletcher Jones Motorcars/Daily Pilot Club Championship
Series. The four womenâs club champions in the Daily Pilot
circulation are invited each summer to participate in the Tea Cup
Classic. The four private country clubs rotate as host site. The
public is invited to gallery, as long as dress-code requirements are
satisfied.
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