Toshiba Senior Classic Golf: Rolling the dice
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Richard Dunn
Weather can play a huge factor in an outdoor event, especially a
professional golf tournament in the winter.
“Actually, the best weather we’ve had since we’ve been running this
tournament was the year of El Nino (1998),” said Jeff Purser, tournament
director of the Senior PGA Tour’s Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport Beach
Country Club.
That year was the tournament’s first under the management of Hoag
Hospital, which hired Purser away from the Midwest.
“It was absolutely gorgeous all week that year,” Purser added. “And it
was the latest we’ve ever held the event in the calendar year.”
Last year, the predicted rain that threatened to shorten the
tournament to two rounds for the second year in a row never materialized.
In the end, after a nine-hole playoff victory for Jose Maria
Canizares, Purser came out smelling like roses.
Purser resisted the suggestion from Senior Tour officials to send
players off both the first and 10th tees for Sunday’s final round. Tour
officials wanted to complete the tournament as soon as possible in an
effort to avoid the storm.
Purser gambled and said no. He decided against that option because it
would take away prime afternoon time for sponsors, many of whom endured
the previous year’s final-round rainout.”I told (tour officials) that
I’ve got sponsors and ticket buyers expecting a show today. Let’s roll
the dice,” Purser said. “It was just a matter of explaining to them what
was important ... they understood what we were doing. There wasn’t an
argument; it wasn’t confrontational. They wanted to do things by the
official rules. Their specialty is the play and competition; our first
objective is to have a good community event.”
One day after Canizares defeated Gil Morgan in the event’s second
nine-hole playoff, the second-longest on the Senior Tour, Purser said he
wanted “70 degrees and sunny ... We got 60,000 to 65,000 fans (for the
three-day weekend, including 17,000 to 18,000 on Sunday) in poor weather.
If you consider we had nobody for the Wednesday and Thursday pro-ams,
that’s a pretty good turnout. If we had great weather for a whole week,
including Friday, Saturday and Sunday, there’s your 80,000 to 90,000
people and $1.3 million to charity.”
Vice President and General Manager of Toshiba Computer Systems Group
Mark Simons, for one, was impressed with Purser’s leadership last year.
“We made a lot of comments about (Purser) being the best tournament
director,” Simons said, “but I think anybody who can control the weather
like he did last year -- he held off the rain for at least 36 hours --
and anybody who can have us going ... has got a lot of control that we as
a tournament can’t do above and beyond the call.”
While an estimated 17,500 attended the final round last year, the
educated-guess attendance by Purser for the Saturday second round was
between 20,000 and 21,000, the largest of the tournament, when the
weather was dry for the third straight day.
Purser arrived from the Midwest shortly after Hoag Hospital took over
as managing charity in August 1997.
“Hey, I’ve gotten rained out before and I’ll get rained out again,”
Purser said. “I’ve had entire greens under two feet of water and
tornadoes surrounding us (at a tour event in the early 1990s at
Youngstown, Ohio). There were five tornadoes within a five-mile (radius),
and one touched down a half-mile away. We had hospitality tents under
water. So what happened (in 2000) wasn’t that bad.”
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