Focused on the future
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Bryce Alderton
Seven hours after completing his first round of the Costa Mesa city
championship Saturday, Robert Caton chipped balls onto a practice
green at Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club.
This was after shooting a 5-under-par 65 to finish the first round
one stroke off the lead. Caton, a 28-year-old Huntington Beach
resident who works in Pelican Hill Golf Club’s guest services
department, which handles valet and cart room duties, shot a 4-over
76 Sunday to finish in a three-way tie for sixth.
Lately, Caton has lurked near the top of the leaderboard no matter
where he plays.
He shot a 7-under-par 137 through 36 holes on the Southern
California Golf Association Golf Course July 26 to qualify for the
United States Amateur golf championship in his first try. The U.S.
Amateur begins Monday at Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, N.Y.
Caton shot 66 during the first 18 holes in the morning, a round
that included five birdies, an eagle and one bogey. He followed up
with a 71 in the afternoon to tie for medalist honors and earn one of
three spots into the most prestigious amateur championship.
“I was so stoked because it was my first time trying to qualify,”
Caton said. “I really felt like I could do it.”
The rise to stardom has come gradually for Caton, who began his
tenure at Pelican Hill four years ago, when he got serious about
golf.
He has won on the Golden State amateur tour and regularly competes
in SCGA events. He is exempt into this year’s SCGA Mid-Amateur Aug.
30-31 at Pauma Valley Country Club after advancing to the second
round of match play at last year’s British Mid-Amateur at St.
Andrews.
Working at a golf course allowed Caton, who carries a plus-2.5
handicap, free playing privileges and he tries to take every
opportunity. He practices regularly and plays at least two to three
times a week, a marked increase from his college and high school
days.
David Wright, a PGA professional who is an assistant coach for USC
men’s and women’s golf teams, hosts golf clinics regularly at Pelican
Hill and has known Caton for five or six years.
The two often speak when they pass each other on the range or near
the putting green.
“Just the other day, I saw Robert on the practice green and he
asked me how to hit a ball sitting against the collar [of the
green],” Wright said. “He works hard and when he goes out, he sets
goals.”
Talk also revolves around the mental aspect of the game, which
Wright said Caton has a firm grip on. Caton started his first round
of the Costa Mesa city championship double-bogey-bogey and then made
eight birdies in the final 16 holes.
“That shows a player who doesn’t give up,” Wright said. “Robert
doesn’t get rattled and that is one of the reasons for his success.”
In June, Caton set the course record on Pelican Hill’s South
Course with a 63.
Caton graduated from Long Beach State in 2000 and started playing
golf when he was young, but only casually.
“I used to play here and there, with friends on weekends,” Caton
said. “I would always shoot in the low 80s, but I never worked on my
game.
“I got the job at Pelican Hill and have become a lot better
golfer. After I graduated college, I dedicated my life to golf. This
is what I want to do.”
Caton has played 12 Golden State tour events this year.
A first- or second-place showing in the U.S. Amateur will guaranty
him a spot in next year’s Masters, his ultimate goal. The first three
rounds of the U.S. Amateur are stroke play before the format shifts
to match play over the weekend. Caton leaves for New York Thursday.
Caton hopes to turn pro in 2005.
Watching professionals also contributed to Caton’s interest in
dedicating his career to golf.
“I saw [the pros] walking around and thought, ‘What do they have
that I don’t have?’” Caton said. “They are made of the same things as
we are.”
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