Golf column
Times are good for Newport Beach Country Club.
First, the club’s president, Jerry Anderson, is named the 1999
Southern California PGA Golf Professional of the Year for the second time
in his distinguished career.
Then, during a time when high-end daily fee public golf courses in
Orange County are looking for players to fill the fairways, the private
club in Newport Beach celebrates a sold-out membership base of 750.
Today, there are 20 potential members on a waiting list.
Finally, as if the club isn’t living large enough, Anderson said
Tuesday the 2000 Toshiba Senior Classic, the Senior PGA Tour stop at
Newport Beach, has sold out in terms of hospitality tents and corporate
boxes.
While the aforementioned tournament (the only PGA event in Orange
County) is operated by the Hoag Hospital Foundation and tournament
director Jeff Purser, Newport Beach Country Club is credited for hosting
the venue in a first-class manner.
In 1998, the first year with Hoag as tournament operator, the Toshiba
Senior Classic raised $701,000 for the hospital and won the Senior PGA
Tour’s Charity of the Year Award. In ‘99, the event raised $828,500 for
charity, bolstering its status as one of the most philanthropic stops on
the Senior Tour.
The tournament set Senior Tour records for the largest first-year
donation, the largest second-year donation and the largest donation for
the first two years combined. The Toshiba Classic started in 1995 at Mesa
Verde Country Club and moved to Newport Beach the following year.
International Sports & Event Marketing managed the tournament for the
first three years.
The Y2K edition of the Toshiba Classic is scheduled for a week earlier
than in past years (Feb. 28 through March 5).
Newport Beach Country Club, which reconstructed the far corner of the
golf course before the ’99 Toshiba event, is planning four more
renovation projects, including a major change at the 18th green.
“There has certainly been a lot of history on that 18th green the past
two years in the Toshiba Senior Classic, but the remodeling will make it
a more challenging finishing hole,” said Anderson, referring to the large
mound that will be built in back of the green.
Following the Toshiba event in March 2000, construction is expected to
begin and the 18th fairway will slope down toward the throat, while the
green is elevated, giving golfers an uphill approach and taking the “easy
birdie” out of play for the Senior Tour guys starting in 2001.
Rebuilt tee boxes are also in the planning stage for Newport Beach,
which has committed to improving the golf course every year as long as it
hosts the Senior Tour stop.
Earlier this year, the club completed a $300,000 project encompassing
holes three, four and five in the outermost portion of the layout. The
highlights included a 42-inch rock retaining wall in front of the fourth
green, a cascading waterfall at the par-three fourth and an updated
irrigation system, in addition to a remodeled lake.
In March, the 18th green served as a stage for Toshiba champion Gary
McCord and runner-up John Jacobs, who chipped in for eagle on the first
playoff hole from 90 feet away. As the greenside gallery erupted, Jacobs
danced a jig, did his best imitation of Chi Chi Rodriguez’s famous “sabre
dance” and then did a backward somersault. McCord, however, won a
five-hole playoff.
The Southern California PGA will hold its annual Section Championship
Sept. 13-15 at the Old Course at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho
Mirage.
Kelly Manos, now the head professional at Big Canyon Country Club, won
the Section title in 1996. Winners earn exemptions into three PGA Tour
events in Southern California.
The Southern California PGA received a $20,000 grant for junior golf
from the United States Golf Association, the first section to receive a
grant from the USGA in 41 years.
Jack Nicklaus, whose golf course architectural company designed the
new Aliso Viejo Golf Club, will make an appearance at the club, put on a
clinic and play an exhibition round Saturday at the high-end, daily fee
public course. Toshiba officials are hoping Nicklaus will come to Orange
County again in February. He has never played in the Toshiba event.
The PGA of America’s Southern California Section will host the 83rd
PGA Annual Meeting Nov. 18-29 at the Anaheim Hilton in Anaheim. Anderson
is a candidate for PGA of America Golf Professional of the Year. Tom
Sargent (Mesa Verde) won the prestigious honor in 1997.
The Inaugural Tee Off for Technology Classic, which will benefit the
Newport Harbor Educational Foundation and raise funds for much-needed
technology for the high school, is planned for Nov. 1 at Santa Ana
Country Club, tournament co-chairman Mitch Barker confirmed Wednesday.
The goal of the event is to raise $50,000 for the foundation. Optimism
is running high for an early sellout. Details: (949) 723-1212.
Richard Dunn’s golf column appears every Thursday.
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