A family feel for Holstein
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Bryce Alderton
When Sally Holstein has a chip shot in Friday’s Tea Cup Classic VII
at Mesa Verde Country Club, she will no doubt occasionally be
thinking about dinner.
Not necessarily dinner that evening, but dinner anytime.
The Big Canyon Country Club women’s champion and younger sister
Sue DeMille, Holstein’s caddy for today’s 18-hole, stroke-play event
featuring the four women’s club champions from the private clubs in
Newport-Mesa, frequently get together for a chipping contest, with
the loser buying dinner.
“We chip close to 200 balls,” Holstein, 52, said about the
competition with her sister, a member at Santa Ana Country Club.
“Now, when I go play Big Canyon, I know exact distances and I am
relaxed and calm. I just chip it instead of getting tense, which I’ve
done many times.
“The practice of doing it over and over again boosts the
confidence. It helps having a sister with you so you don’t get bored.
I usually buy her dinner.”
The two teamed up to win the gross division at Big Canyon’s ladies
two-day tournament for the first time in June.
Holstein will practice her swing in DeMille’s backyard one day and
the next, DeMille will stop by Big Canyon to share a few putting
tips.
“She helps me and vice versa,” said Holstein, who first began
taking golf lessons when she was 12 on the urging of her parents,
George and Elinor.
“The first time I hit a driver, I said, ‘I like this sport,’ ”
Holstein recalled. “My parents always motivated me to play golf. They
would leave for four or five hours to play golf when we went on
vacations, so I wanted to [play along] so I could see them.”
Holstein, a Costa Mesa resident and accountant for a commercial
property manager, was first a member at Irvine Coast Country Club,
now Newport Beach CC, before joining Big Canyon in 1983, where her
parents already were members.
Competition with Sue began to heat up, causing Holstein to focus
more on her game.
“Sue started to beat me and I had beat her previously,” said
Holstein, who also has an older sister, Sandy Thomas. “She lived at
Big Canyon and played more than I did. At that time I was only
playing once a month.”
Holstein joined a ladies group and began playing twice a week,
much like she does these days.
Friday, Holstein will join Akemi Khaiat, Mesa Verde’s women’s club
champion, Marianne Towersey (Santa Ana CC) and Debbie Albright
(Newport Beach Country Club) when the Tea Cup begins at 1:30 p.m. at
Mesa Verde. Holstein’s only other Tea Cup appearance was also at Mesa
Verde, in 1999.
“I love the course, it is a bit more open [than Big Canyon],” she
said.
Holstein, who is single, will try to maintain a calmness once she
steps on the first tee, but knows it won’t be easy with galleries in
tow.
“I’m not used to playing in front of people, but I’m almost
excited,” Holstein said. “I’m just going to try to take deep breaths,
think good thoughts and hopefully the ball will go in the air.”
Holstein, who went to Corona del Mar High, and Towersey grew up on
the same street and competed against one another often from the time
they were young.
“She is so good, she should be a professional, but she decided to
be a mom instead,” Holstein said of Towersey, who finished fifth in
last week’s California Women’s Championship. “I’m going to enjoy the
day and play with my friends.”
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