Toshiba Senior Classic: One tough customer
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Lanny Wadkins earned a reputation for being a
gunslinger and fierce competitor on the PGA Tour, and he apparently has
no intention to change that in his first year on the Senior PGA Tour.
One of three marquee “rookies” on this year’s senior tour, Wadkins, aside
from having to learn about new cities and golf courses, feels he’s
anything but a rookie.
“Most rookies have something to prove, and I don’t think I have anything
to prove,” Wadkins said Monday after arriving in town for the Toshiba
Senior Classic at Newport Beach Country Club.
Wadkins, Tom Kite and Tom Watson, the latter of whom is not playing in
this week’s senior tour event at Newport Beach, are the tour’s three new
kids on the block. And Wadkins, who won 21 titles on the PGA Tour in his
illustrious, including the 1977 PGA Championship at Pebble Beach, is
ready for the senior tour’s new challenges.
“I think the reception has been outstanding for all three of us,” Wadkins
said. “The other players have been very helpful and accommodating,
helping us with getting to know the hotels, restaurants and the golf
courses. I’ve enjoyed the reception, and, hopefully, I’ll do my part to
help the senior tour.”
Wadkins has already been pulling his weight on the 50-and-over circuit,
becoming the ninth player in senior tour history to win in his first
start Feb. 13 at the ACE Group Classic in Naples, Fla., when he prevailed
in a three-hole playoff that began with four players (Jose Maria
Canizares, Walter Hall and Watson were also in the field).
“In the third round, I lit it up, and then played real well in the
playoff,” said Wadkins, who started the final round three shots back,
then tied a course record with a bogey-free eight-under-par 64 at the
Pelican Marsh Golf Club to force a playoff.
“I was as confident in that playoff as I’ve been in any playoff in my
career. I just felt like I wasn’t going to lose, and I was very proud of
that.”
Wadkins, who collected $180,000 for his title at the ACE Group Classic,
is sixth on the senior tour’s money list in only three events ($190,070)
heading into the sixth annual Toshiba Classic.
“It was great to get that first (win),” Wadkins said. “I was smoking on
the first day, and I felt good the whole tournament (at Naples). I was a
little nervous, but also excited. I’d played in the Bob Hope (Chrysler
Classic), but before that I didn’t play much. So maybe my adrenaline and
senses were up in (the ACE Group Classic).”
In 28 years on the PGA Tour, Wadkins was known to take pleasure in facing
tough opponents, a precarious pin or a particularly challenging golf
course -- traits that led to him becoming one of the best players on
tour.
“I just like playing golf. I have fun playing, but I don’t think anything
about (my reputation),” said Wadkins, the 1995 U.S. Ryder Cup captain and
eight-time member of the team. “I’ve played the same way since I was a
kid. Everybody plays their own style out here. I’m not trying to do
anything different (on the senior tour). (Being aggressive) is just the
way I play.”
Wadkins, who turned 50 on Dec. 5 and became eligible for the senior tour,
hadn’t won a title on the PGA Tour since the 1992 Greater Hartford Open,
so it was extra sweet to get back into the winner’s circle at Naples,
where Wadkins won in three extra holes.
“These guys can really play out here. I didn’t really know what to
expect,” Wadkins said after the title, in which Hall was eliminated on
the first playoff hole, and Watson on the second, before Canizares
bogeyed the third to open the door for Wadkins’ win.
Wadkins, who won three times on the PGA Tour in both 1982 and 1985,
placing second on the money list in ‘85, said that lately his putter has
been failing him. That’s why he came out Monday for some extra work on
the putting green. He will probably not play a practice round today,
which is a designated practice day for the professionals.
“If I play (today), I’ll be too lethargic by the end of the tournament,”
said Wadkins, who will play in the Toshiba Senior Classic Pro-Am rounds
Wednesday and Thursday, before teeing it up Friday in the first round.
Wadkins, who plans to play about 25 events on the senior tour this year,
said one of the most difficult aspects has been scheduling his time and
learning the ropes of the 50-and-over circuit.
“I’m used to playing three or four tournaments in a row, then taking two
weeks off, and I’ve had a hard time with that routine,” he said.
Wadkins also said he isn’t concerned about the high expectations people
have for him in his first season on the senior tour.
“I can’t worry about anybody else’s expectations, or anybody else’s
perception (of me),” Wadkins said.
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