The legend of Gene Baum lives on
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Somewhere in the heavens, and probably on a golf course, the late
Gene Baum is praising his former volunteer colleagues through Hoag
Hospital’s 552 Club.
None of this, the PGA Champions Tour’s Toshiba Senior Classic at
Newport Beach Country Club, would be quite the same, or perhaps even
possible, if it wasn’t for Baum, who, in his golden years, helped
transform a gags-and-giggles pro-am clambake into a highly respected
mini-tour event -- the Newport Classic Pro-Am.
The same core of volunteers, who operated the Newport Classic
(formerly the Crosby Southern Pro-Am) for 23 years as a fund-raiser
for Hoag, moved over to manage the Toshiba Classic six years ago and
have flourished like a fresh bouquet of roses since.
Baum, co-founder and organizer of some of the most successful
fund-raising efforts, died on June 25, 1996, at age 85, and,
unfortunately, didn’t get to see the Big Move in 1997, when the
Senior PGA Tour phoned for help and Hoag came to the rescue like a
wartime medic.
Along with Toshiba Senior Classic Co-Chairman Jake Rohrer, Baum
would travel every fall to the PGA Tour National Qualifying
Tournament and invite (i.e., recruit) players for the Newport Classic
Pro-Am in late January. It was an annual ritual, a pilgrimage that
formed and nurtured a strong relationship with the PGA Tour.
“We were really only one or two tournaments allowed to recruit
players at Q School,” said Rohrer, who was the guy PGA Tour official
Tim Crosby called in ’97 to take over the Toshiba Senior Classic,
thanks to a long relationship with the tour.
Baum, a man with a golden touch and twinkle in his eye, dedicated
his retirement life to the Newport Beach community and Hoag Hospital.
He made sure every golf pro who teed it up had a friend here.
“He was a true people lover,” his wife of 60 years, Phyllis, once
said.
Known for his straw hat and plus fours on the golf course, the
affable Baum, whose efforts were indispensable while his appeal was
priceless, could roar like a lion when necessary and always kept
matters in check during his countless hours of volunteering for the
Newport Classic Pro-Am, a precursor to the modern-day Toshiba Classic
with Hoag as the operating manager.
Organizers of both tournaments have had a reputation for taking
care of its players during tournament week. Their experience in
tournament hospitality services began in January 1975, when members
of the 552 Club launched the Crosby Southern Pro-Am.
“We had a very interesting relationship,” Rohrer said. “We were
personal friends. We were co-volunteers obviously for the [Newport
Classic], but he was a little more like a father figure to me. My dad
always lived on the East Coast, and I didn’t get to see him that
much, so Gene kind of filled that role for me. More than anything, we
were good friends, despite a substantial difference in age [about 33
years], and we worked well together.”
Baum, who spent his summers growing up on Balboa Island and later
retired there, also volunteered for key roles in other Hoag Hospital
fund-raisers, such as the 552 Club Stag Shoot, Bertram Yachts Tag &
Release Billfish Tournament and the Festival of Trees.
Baum, the 552 Club’s recipient of the prestigious Siracusa Award
in 1982, was a charter member of the Balboa Island Yacht Club,
founded in 1922, a club that teaches children ages 4-16 about boating and water safety.
For the Assistance League of Newport-Mesa, Baum dressed up as
Santa Claus each year and showered the children with gifts in the day
care center.
Born in Los Angeles in 1911, Baum lived in the Arcadia area for
many years working as a general manager of Coast Envelope, a division
of Hammermill Paper.
Baum’s son, Steve, and daughter-in-law, Cathy, have upheld the
tradition and volunteered the last three years at the Toshiba Senior
Classic, which enjoyed another banner year in 2002 in charitable
giving.
Hoag, the lead charity of the Toshiba Classic, is about to take
the national stage. The Newport Beach hospital will be featured in a
30-second public service announcement that will run prominently
during national TV programming, including PGA Tour and PGA Champions
Tour telecasts.
The Toshiba Senior Classic has been the charitable flag bearer on
the PGA Champions Tour. In the past five years, the tournament has
raised more than $4.7 million for over 25 different charities, the
most on the Champions Tour.
The Toshiba Senior Classic was the first Champions Tour event to
raise $1 million for charity in a single year (2000), and last year
became the first to raise $1 million in three consecutive years.
In 1998, after running its first senior tour event, Hoag was
awarded the tour’s inaugural Charity of the Year award after raising
more than $700,000 through the Toshiba Classic. Could you imagine the
twinkle in Baum’s eye after seeing those figures?
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