Cruising along with the players
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Oh, sure, there are other ways to get close to the players on the PGA
Champions Tour without getting arrested, but volunteers in the
transportation committee of the Toshiba Senior Classic appear to have
it wired.
As you stroll through the main parking lot at Newport Beach
Country Club, there are rows of Escalade ESVs, Cadillac’s fancy
schmancy sports utility vehicle. Cadillac has been a sponsor of the
tour for years, and players are afforded the use of one at each stop.
Some fans follow their favorite golfers on the course, while at
times trying to look over crowds in the gallery three or four people
deep.
You can try to approach a player after he has left the putting
green or driving range, but good luck getting more than an autograph
and simple hello. There’s an excellent chance he’s on his way to a
pro-am round or trying to keep a tight schedule. After all, this is
where they come to work.
But for those volunteers serving in transportation, a committee
headed by Mary Boyle, it’s a cruise well worth the trip.
“You get to pick them up and talk to them,” said transportation
volunteer Dave Sill, who was busy tearing off a window emblem on the
passenger’s side of Gibby Gilbert’s Escalade from last weekend’s SBC
Championship at Valencia Country Club and replacing it with a Toshiba
Senior Classic insignia.
“We also get to met their families, and you get to interact with
the players on a more personal basis than at the golf course.”
Sill, working on the high-end Cadillac SUVs with fellow
transportation volunteer Lloyd Ikerd of Newport Beach, is in his
seventh year as a volunteer. For Ikerd, a member of the Newport Beach
Chamber of Commerce Commodores Club, it’s his second year.
“It’s a fun deal,” Ikerd said.
Boyle and her staff of about six made the trek up to Valencia
twice to pick up the SUVs on Sunday and another trip Monday. They all
drove up in a van and caravaned back down to Newport Beach to get the
vehicles ready for tournament week.
“Somebody gave Chi Chi Rodriguez a ride to his hotel,” Sill said.
“It’s a big convenience for the players.”
Volunteers in the transportation committee not only pick up
players at the airport and hotel, but members of the players’ family,
as well.
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Ron Guziak, executive director of the Hoag Hospital Foundation,
said he anticipates excellent weather this weekend, and, if the
conditions are anything like Monday’s, Hoag could be in for another
banner year in terms of money raised through the tournament.
“This weekend, considering all that’s going on in the world, I
think people are really going to come out to the tournament,” Guziak
said. “They can be close to home and still get away.”
“People are going to come out in droves,” added Jim Dale, vice
president of Major Gifts for the foundation.
Hoag, the Toshiba Senior Classic’s managing operator, is the
tour’s philanthropic leader in charitable giving and will take the
national stage when 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 spot will be filmed at Hoag this week with Gary McCord, who
won the event in 1999 and grew up in Orange County, as the star. It
will highlight the charitable accomplishments of the Toshiba Classic,
with particular focus on the new Hoag Women’s Pavilion, which has
benefited greatly from tournament proceeds and is now being built on
the hospital’s campus.
The Toshiba Senior Classic has been the charitable flag bearer on
the Champions Tour. In the past five years, the tournament has raised
more than $4.7 million for more than 25 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.
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