Golf: There’s a new sheriff on the course
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Richard Dunn
Chalk up the damage created on hole No. 6 to the inclement weather
during, coincidentally, the sixth annual Toshiba Senior Classic.
Normally a difficult hole, but certainly not the toughest historically,
No. 6 ranked first in severity last week in the Senior PGA Tour stop at
Newport Beach Country Club.
The par-four, 418-yard dogleg left, with an intimidating tree line on the
left side of the fairway, played harder than usual because of swirling
winds in the rain-shortened, 36-hole event.
Hole No. 5, which usually plays tough and is the beginning of a
challenging, six-hole stretch, ranked second this year in terms of
difficulty.
“Everybody was commenting on how long the golf course played, and that’s
because when you hit the ball on the fairway, it didn’t move very far,”
club president Jerry Anderson said. “You just didn’t get a lot of roll,
and holes five and six played even longer because of the swirling winds
(generated by the storm) and prevailing winds off the ocean, and there
was no roll in the fairways.”
A fairway bunker was added to hole No. 6 this year about 240 yards off
the tee, and “it came into play for a number of players who strayed a
little to the right,” Anderson said.
“I actually think now, since we shortened No. 5 a few years ago (by 25
yards), that No. 6 may be the most difficult hole on that front-side
stretch, and it may prove out to be that way again, unless you catch (the
fairway) dry and get a roll.”
No. 6, only the fifth-toughest hole last year, normally plays upwind, but
the storm played havoc on tee shots and approaches to the green.
Nos. 5 and 6 yielded only nine birdies each, the lowest in the event. No.
6 also allowed the fewest pars (85).
Not surprisingly, no eagle has ever been carded on the sixth hole in five
years at Newport Beach.
The amazing turnaround of the Toshiba Senior Classic, from nearly
crumbling in May 1997 to becoming the class of the senior tour,
establishing a tour-donation record $1 million this year, is worth a
book.
Best shot witnessed during the Toshiba Classic was Roy Vucinich’s
approach from the right rough at 18 in the first round, when his ball was
stuck a few yards behind a pine tree with an unusually thick trunk.
A branch of the pine tree, leaning toward the fairway, was low to the
ground and no doubt impeding Vucinich’s sight to the hole.
But Vucinich, a former club pro at Allegheny Country Club near
Pittsburgh, cut a four-iron out of trouble and left it 71 yards to the
hole. From there, Vucinich hit a lob wedge 30 feet past the pin on the
green, then sank a dramatic birdie putt to tie for the lead.
Before pulling out the four-iron, Vucinich warned the fans in the gallery
to “move back and be careful in case the ball bounces off this tree.”
Vucinich, however, kept it low and through the narrow opening, getting it
on the fairway and setting up his birdie. It’s what they call on
television a “professional shot.”
Vucinich was one of the more interesting Toshiba newcomers in 2000, and
one of few on the senior tour who actually like the poa annua greens at
Newport Beach.
“These greens are beautiful,” Vucinich said. “That poa annua is good
stuff. That’s the kind of grass we have in Pittsburgh.”
Vucinich finished eighth at the 1999 Senior PGA Tour National Qualifying
Tournament to earn his exempt status this year.
Highest single-round score in the Toshiba Classic was an 81, turned in by
two players -- Jay Sigel and Dave Hill, both in the first round. Jimmy
Powell shot 80 in the first round.
Pro-Am crash update: The amateur who was injured last week in the Toshiba
Classic Pro-Am apparently was not the one driving the golf cart at the
time of the accident.
Two amateurs share a cart during pro-am rounds, and, during the Wednesday
round, the driver tried to go under a rope, resulting in a serious injury
to an amateur, also a Toshiba employee.
The amateur was taken to Hoag Hospital after suffering head wounds. As
the cart reportedly tried to go under the tough, nylon rope, it stretched
the rope and caused a stake to snap out of the ground and hit the amateur
in the head.
The amateur was knocked unconscious at the 12th hole, according to
eyewitnesses, which included a volunteer marshal, and blood spilled onto
the front of the golf cart.
The inaugural Mazda Open Celebrity Golf Tournament will be held March 20
at Mesa Verde Country Club to raise funds to construct a new Arts
Pavilion at Orange Coast College.
Celebrity golfers are expected to include former NFL stars Dick Butkus
and Eric Dickerson, former Laker Kurt Rambis and Chris Myers of Fox
Sports News. Details: (949) 727-6304.
The inaugural Tommy Bahama Pacific Coast Classic, a golf tournament to
benefit the Center For Community Solutions, is scheduled for Monday at
Newport Beach with an appearance by 1999 Toshiba champion Gary McCord,
who is sponsored by Tommy Bahama.
The cost is $175 per player, which includes golf, cart, lunch on the
course, Tommy Bahama Aruba Zip and hat, and a dinner with open bar at
Tommy Bahama’s Tropical Cafe. Details: (949) 760-8686.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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