Marianne Towersey, Millennium Hall of Fame
In what will always be remembered as one of the great golf feats of
our time, Marianne Towersey of Santa Ana Country Club gaveo7
competitivef7 play a new definition this summer.
A longtime club champion and former top-ranked junior in the nation,
Towersey pulled off an amazing doubleheader in a scheduled 54-hole bout
Aug. 13, beginning with the 36-hole match-play final in the Women’s
Southern California Golf Association event at Mission Viejo Country Club,
then concluding with the Tea Cup Classic -- an 18-hole, made-for-Daily
Pilot exhibition at Mesa Verde Country Club.
Even with a foreign putter and 35 holes of competitive golf already in
her bag, Towersey captured the third annual Tea Cup Classic by o7
sevenf7 strokes in an unheard-of effort that will forever live in local
golf lore.
The reigning queen of the links in the Newport-Mesa community,
Towersey won her second straight Tea Cup Classic title in 1999, but
solidified her place as a Hall of Famer long ago, having won 15 of the
last 18 women’s club championships at Santa Ana Country Club -- an
ongoing club record for the oldest club in Orange County.
A Corona del Mar High graduate and Stanford history major, Towersey
grew up playing Santa Ana, and, at age 16, defeated future LPGA Hall of
Famer JoAnne Carner (nee Gunderson) in the first round of match play at
the 1967 U.S. Women’s Amateur and went on to the quarterfinals. Gunderson
would capture five U.S. Amateur titles in her career, including 1966 and
‘68. A recent issue of Golf World magazine included Towersey’s victory
over Gunderson as one of the country’s 10 greatest upsets this century.
Towersey, who won the 1999 Santa Ana women’s club title by o7 36
strokesf7 after shooting a four-round 307, was a primary reason why the
Tea Cup Classic was invented in the first place by this sports section
two years ago. The large margins of victory by the ladies champions
created interest in a one-day community showdown -- and Towersey has
proved to be up to the task in the Fletcher Jones Motorcars/Daily Pilot
Club Championship Series.
In the 1970s, Towersey became disenchanted with the prospects of
playing on the LPGA Tour and decided to focus on her career and family.
But after an eight-year hiatus from golf, she returned to the game and,
while pregnant with her second son, Patrick, won the 1981 women’s state
amateur championship.
“Once I met my husband (Brian), he was interested in playing golf and
we purchased my parents’ membership, and there I was, back at Santa Ana
Country Club,” said the latest member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame, celebrating the millennium.
Towersey is three club championships away from breaking the area’s
all-time record of 17, held by Newport Beach Country Club’s Dee Dee
White, a Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer who won her first title in 1961
at age 37 and her last at the club in 1986.
As if Towersey wasn’t prominent enough at Santa Ana Country Club, her
family has a rich history there. Her grandfather, Richard Emison, was
among the original SACC members when the club was located at the
Castaways. Emison is also the club’s only three-time president.
Towersey’s late father, Alvin, is a former President’s Cup champion at
Santa Ana, while her mother, Pat Cox, is a four-time women’s club
champion there, winning titles in 1947, 1952, 1961 and 1962.
Her husband has won Santa Ana senior club titles, while her son, Chad,
has won Santa Ana junior club championships. She has two sons, Chad, who
turns 20 this month, and Patrick, 18. They live in Newport Beach.
Towersey, who has one career hole in one, played volleyball, tennis
and golf at CdM High, and golf and tennis at Stanford. “She’s one helluva
an athlete,” Brian Towersey said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.