A breakfast with champions
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Tony Dodero
The kickoff to a week’s worth of Toshiba tournament festivities began
with the customary early Tuesday morning breakfast of eggs, potatoes
and lots of coffee. The Toshiba Senior Classic Champions Breakfast at
the Newport Beach Marriott, to be precise.
The 400 or so guests at the hotel ballroom, who ran the gamut from
city officials to amateur golf aficionados, were treated to an
animated panel discussion featuring golfing legends Fuzzy Zoeller and
Chi Chi Rodriguez and last year’s Toshiba Classic victor, Rodger
Davis of Australia. That victory marked his career first on the
Champions Tour.
The trio is in town this week for the tournament that celebrates
its 10th year and has raised more than $5.7 million for Hoag Memorial
Hospital Presbyterian.
This year won’t be any different.
“We’re really here to raise money for Hoag Hospital,” said Hank
Adler, the co-chairman of the Senior Classic. “Our goal is to raise
$1 million.”
The $1.6-million event features 78 veteran players 50 years of age
or older from the PGA Champions Tour and is considered the biggest
senior tour fundraiser for charity.
“We’re glad to be here for 20, 30, 40 more years, with Toshiba at
the top,” said Rick George, president of the PGA Champions Tour.
Asked questions by moderator Mark Lye of the Golf Channel, the
trio of Zoeller, Rodriguez and Davis talked of changes to the sport
of golf, such as longer balls being hit and women trying to break
into the men’s tour.
“Players are better today and more talented,” Zoeller said when
asked how the game should change. “But the answer is not to build
bigger golf courses.”
Rodriguez, who has been on the senior tour since the mid-1980s,
agreed, saying that the older golfers need to quit making comparisons
to the younger, more physical and talented golfers of today, players
such as Tiger Woods.
“I keep telling [Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer] that if they
keep talking about the equipment and don’t give him the credit he
deserves, they are going to die as two very jealous old men,”
Rodriguez said.
As for making allowances to women who want to play golf on the
men’s tour, Davis and Zoeller didn’t think that was a good idea.
“We do live in America, the land of the free,” Zoeller said. “But
do I think it’s right? No.”
But Rodriguez wasn’t so sure and made mention of teenage golfing
phenomenon Michelle Wie, who he said could beat many of the male
pros.
“I’d love to see her win a tournament,” he said. “It would be good
for women’s rights and good for us all.”
And he doesn’t mind sharing the links with women.
“I would rather play with Annika Sorenstam than Walter Zembriski,”
he quipped. “I’m all for the women.”
Asked to compare the present-day champion Tiger Woods with Jack
Nicklaus in his prime, all three chose Woods as the better golfer.
Their advice for amateur golfers invited to take part in the
pro-am events that are part of Toshiba week was equally cutting.
“You better bring an extra dozen balls,” Rodriguez said.
Zoeller also didn’t mince words.
“You don’t have to wear your brand new clothes and your brand new
shoes and the brand new pants your wife bought you,” he said. “These
people who come out to watch are not coming out to watch you.”
Also part of the annual breakfast is the awarding of the Toshiba
Senior Classic Scholarship Fund, which has given out $113,000 since
its inception.
Twelve Orange County High School seniors each picked up a $2,000
grant and a Toshiba laptop computer.
From Newport-Mesa schools, the winners were Britta Pitti of
Estancia, Lilliana Moreno of Newport Harbor, Christine Bjelland of
Costa Mesa High and Florencia Krochik of Corona del Mar high schools.
Also honored were Nana Wilberforce, Ryan Stancil, Jay Sahgal,
Sureel Sheth, George Tran, Austin Ong, Altaf Saadi and Jessica
McMillin, all from Irvine or South County high schools.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He may be reached at (949) 574-4258
or by e-mail to [email protected].
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