Newport Beach CC turning the big 5-0
BRYCE ALDERTON
As I get set to cover this year’s Toshiba Senior Classic for the
first time, a majority of my hours will undoubtedly be spent perusing
through old newspaper articles and books, along with listening to the
stories from the people who were there. This is all in an attempt to
gain a valuable historical perspective on the PGA Champions Tour
event, which celebrates its 10th anniversary March 15-21.
So it came as a relief that I received an e-mail from Chuck Loos,
a former managing editor at the Daily Pilot, who has been a member at
Newport Beach Country Club since 1997, announcing the club on East
Coast Highway will celebrate its 50th anniversary the weekend of Feb.
13-15.
But wait, an important designation needs to be made here for those
who like to read between the lines. Newport Beach Country Club has
been the official name since 1986. Before that, the venue at 1600
East PCH was known as Irvine Coast Country Club.
Back to Loos and his hard work.
“I’m a member of the tournament committee and they were looking
for ideas of what to do,†Loos said.
To kick off the festivities, a 1950s-style sock hop will be held
Friday night, complete with food and music of the era along with
guest appearances by Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe impersonators.
A men’s golf tournament is scheduled for Feb. 14, the date the first tee shot was struck at the course 50 years ago. A couples’
tournament will conclude the weekend bash on Feb. 15.
Loos welcomed the opportunity to trace the club’s roots, getting
his investigative juices flowing.
“I’m basically a historian,†Loos said. “Country clubs are
notoriously lax in keeping records. I dug up [historical facts] for
the benefit of the members.â€
This might bore some of you who already know all of what is to
follow, but for those who haven’t heard, enjoy.
What follows is a little history about how NBCC came about and the
changes it has endured.
Irvine Company President Myford “Mike†Irvine and Hadd Ring,
president of a local investment company, were playing a round at
Santa Ana Country Club on a hot summer day in 1953.
Both were complaining about the heat when Ring turned to Irvine
and said, “Well, why don’t you build your own course along the coast?
I’ll run it for you.â€
Not much time passed before that suggestion turned into reality.
Irvine persuaded 100 men to each raise $1,000 and the Irvine Co.
put up another $100,000 to build the country club Ring and Henderson
would own.
It was Valentine’s Day 1954 when Irvine, Ring, Tom Henderson and
Irvine Co. Vice President Charlie Cogan teed off at 1:04 p.m.,
breaking in the course designed by William Bell Jr.
The 6,598-yard layout would host numerous U.S. Open qualifying
rounds and was the home of the Crosby Southern Pro-Am, a two-day
event with a field built around pros who didn’t make the cut at Bing
Crosby’s famous pro-am “clambake†at Pebble Beach. The Crosby
Southern later evolved into the Newport Classic, a mini-tour event
that raised thousands of dollars for Hoag Hospital.
Oh yeah, then that big tournament, the Toshiba Senior Classic,
came to Newport in 1996 and remains this area’s biggest golfing story
each year. The tournament has raised more than $1 million for charity
four consecutive years.
Back to the name game and that great year -- 1986.
On New Year’s Day the club officially became known as “Newport
Beach Country Club†when W.D. Ray -- another investor -- became the
new owner. Ray also owned the Balboa Bay Club and the Balboa Bay Club
Racquet Club. That same year, Jerry Anderson was named the club’s
director of golf. Anderson is currently the club’s president and
chief operating officer.
Also in 1986, the club named its men’s member-guest tournament
“The Regatta†and adopted a new logo featuring a stylized seahorse,
designed by artist Cathy Burns.
The same clubhouse that first foursome walked through in 1954
still stands, but has gone through renovations to maintain its charm.
Maybe we need two birthday cakes. One with 50 candles and another
with 18.
Isn’t history great?
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