Newkirk still an ace
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DON CANTRELL
Many golfers may dream of hitting a hole-in-one, but it generally
remains nothing more than a wishful picture.
Jim Newkirk, 67, a great baseball pitcher and football lineman
during the mid-1950s at Newport Harbor High and Orange Coast College,
never thought much about golf or a hole-in-one until after he had
turned 40.
His dad, Jim Sr., introduced him to golf and son Jim expressed
interest since he had become too old to play baseball.
A hole in one never emerged in his first 15 years of playing golf,
but the big magic came about 10 years ago, Newkirk said, when he was
playing at a club in Avila Beach, near San Luis Obispo.
Chances are fair that Newkirk never gave it much thought after
that exciting episode.
However, his name was glittering again on the links recently when
he scored his second hole-in-one at the Golf Club of Oklahoma in
Broken Arrow, near Tulsa.
One pleasing thought was that the Broken Arrow course was designed
by noted course designer Tom Fazio. It is a challenging course.
After viewing the fairway, Newkirk could easily assess it was a
downhill hole with a dogleg to the left and one lake on each side of
the dogleg. Not a simple task.
However, Newkirk pulled out his No. 3 iron and angled for the
hole, 177 yards away, on a par-3 course.
He finally peered down the way and, to his amazement, he saw the
ball roll right into the distant cup.
He still has the scorecard tucked away in an office desk drawer.
Although his golfing travels are now limited to the United States,
Newkirk had some colorful experiences in the 1980s when he chalked up
travels to Europe. He recalls playing the game in Spain, France,
Scotland and Ireland.
But today, Newkirk is closer than ever to golf, residentially. He
and his lovely wife Martha recently moved to a new golf course
development in Irvine called Shady Canyon Golf Club.
Newkirk wanted to update me on what he called an interesting
development in the Irvine area.
“The UC Irvine Anteaters baseball team was ranked as high as No. 7
in the nation and actually made it to the regional playoffs, losing
in the last inning to Arizona,” he said.
The team lost its coach [John Savage] last month to UCLA, he
reported, but was able to hire the No. 1 assistant from national
champion Cal State Fullerton [Dave Serrano] to replace him.
Newkirk believes Serrano is a bona-fide coach and should do well
with a team that is young and talented.
Newkirk, a UCLA baseball booster, said, “We helped build a top-10
baseball field three years ago and now we have a program on line to
add a top-notch clubhouse to the diamond area.
“In this day, it’s necessary to have all the good ‘digs’ in order
to attract skilled players. I made a lead gift and, so far, we’ve
raised about $700,000 toward a goal of $1,750,000, but $1 million
will get it started.”
During Serrano’s eight years at Fullerton, 24 pitchers were
selected in the major league draft. Serrano served as pitching coach
and a recruiter. He was also called one of the top assistant coaches
on the West Coast by Baseball America.
Newkirk had an outstanding pitching record from high school on
through Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and led Orange Coast to a statte
baseball title in 1956. His 1957 OCC team made it to the state
playoffs, but lost, 4-3, to Pasadena.
He was also a sterling lineman on the OCC football team of 1957,
one that stunned nationally top-ranked Santa Ana College, 13-7, and
captured the Eastern Conference championship when Steve Musseau was
head coach.
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