Sargent heads to farther reaches
- Share via
BRYCE ALDERTON
Rack up another honor for Mesa Verde Country Club head professional
Tom Sargent.
The PGA National Golf Professional of the Year in 1997 was elected to a three-year term as director of a three-district area
encompassing Southern and Northern California, along with Hawaii,
prior to attending an annual PGA conference in San Antonio in
November.
Sargent, who has taught more than 30 national junior
All-Americans, will represent 3,500 PGA members (teaching pros) and
apprentices between the three sections. Sargent has earned Teacher of
the Year for the PGA’s Southern California section three times.
His current and former students include several PGA Tour players
such as Bob May and LPGA pro Kellie Booth, who won the 1993 United
States Golf Association’s Girls Junior Amateur title held at Mesa
Verde.
He came to Mesa Verde in 1995, four years after earning Golf
Professional of the Year for the Southern California section, where
he served as section president from 1993-95.
Jerry Anderson, general manager at Newport Beach Country Club,
along with former Southern California Golf Association President Dirk
Kingma, were elected to serve on the SCPGA’s Board of Directors.
Anderson, a former SCPGA president, and Kingma replace Sargent and
Big Canyon’s Director of Golf Bob Lovejoy, whose terms on the board
each expired.
*
Construction to two holes and the driving range at Santa Ana
Country Club is complete and little did I know that one comment --
uttered back in August by the club’s head pro Geoff Cochrane -- of a
lake that fronts the par-4 seventh green would actually fulfill
itself to my displeasure.
He said the lake that fronts the green would surely come into
play.
While playing a round last month with Kirk Norton and Tim
DeCinces, neighbors in a Costa Mesa neighborhood, I took out a 3-wood
for my second shot -- a nice poke that would have to clear an edge of
the water to make the green.
I was already a bit peeved about hitting a tee shot that surely
tore up more blades of grass than necessary, so I set up to the ball
with the determination to keep my head down and swing smoothly.
Mission accomplished, I thought.
The ball sailed off the club crisply, not too high or too low.
I shouldn’t have peeked up.
The ball began to curve slightly to the left, but I couldn’t see
where it hit the ground because the fairway dipped slightly near the
front of the green.
I held my breath and drove the cart toward the green, nervously
awaiting the fate of that little white ball.
Turns out I didn’t have to wait too long. DeCinces -- standing
near the edge of the lake -- gave the bad news. My ball had rolled in
the water.
“You should be able to find it since it wasn’t going that fast,”
DeCinces.
He was right.
I was able to use an iron to scoop up the ball and it was time for
my fourth shot.
Yikes. But that is the way golf goes.
I should have listened to you, Geoff. The two holes, Nos. 3 and 7,
look great with the reworked bunkering and the range now has five
target greens to shoot for.
*
Jason Cassidy, last spring’s Golden West League individual boys
golf champion as an Estancia High senior, will transfer from
Saddleback College in Mission Viejo to Orange Coast for the upcoming
spring semester, which begins February 2. Estancia claimed last
season’s league crown.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.