Tea Cup Classic: All is bright in Tea Cup Classic V
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - It was definitely all bright Friday in Newport
Beach -- as in Debbie Albright.
Playing the Newport Beach Country Club fairways and greens like a true
women’s club champion, Albright showed a grateful and loyal gallery of an
estimated 250 at Tea Cup Classic V how to play her home golf course.
The others in her foursome -- Mesa Verde Country Club’s Denise
Woodard, Big Canyon Country Club’s Olivia Slutzky and three-time
defending Tea Cup champion Marianne Towersey of Santa Ana Country Club --
trailed Albright in the final 13 holes as the vivacious blond and
six-time Newport Beach champion captured the prestigious perpetual Tea
Cup Classic trophy for her club.
But, while Albright enjoyed a four-stroke lead in the last four holes
in the locally famous Tea Cup Classic, it wasn’t easy at the end.
On 18, Albright hit into a bunker on the left side of the fairway, but
stayed in the sand after her second shot with a 9-wood. Instead of
unraveling, Albright “just focused on a good tempo to get out (with a
6-iron)” and survived her most difficult moment of the day.
With Slutzky and Towersey breathing down her neck, and battling for
second place, Albright maintained her poise and settled for bogey at 18.
She won by two strokes.
“I’m so excited, I can’t stand it,” said Albright, who has played in
all five Tea Cup Classics, but this time carried away the glass cup,
finishing at 6-over-par 78.
“It was like survival out there,” added Albright, who made five
consecutive pars on the back nine (12 through 16). “It’s great (to win).
It’s so exciting. It’s a fun day whether you finish first or last. But it
was fun to play well.”
Albright was second in the inaugural Tea Cup Classic to Big Canyon’s
Selby Schriber in 1997, then finished as the bridesmaid twice more,
including last year’s playoff against Towersey.
Albright, who won an Orange County golf publication title last year
for all of the women’s club champions in the county, was swarmed
afterward by friends and family, including her husband, Jock, and
children Katie and Charlie, who know more than anyone how much winning
Tea Cup Classic V meant to their mother on her home course.
“They’re all great golfers (in the Tea Cup),” Albright said. “You have
to be on your game out there.”
Albright, a 1-handicap golfer who consistently breaks 80 at Newport
Beach, made three pars in a row on holes 3 through 5 to take a one-stroke
lead, an advantage she never relinquished.
On the par-4 No. 5, the course’s No. 1 handicap hole and usually the
toughest hole for members of the Senior PGA Tour in the annual Toshiba
Senior Classic, Albright hit the green in two, then came up just short on
a downhill 25-foot birdie attempt, leaving an easy par.
Albright’s lead increased at the par-3 No. 8, when she made par and
Towersey bogeyed. Woodard drained a 30-foot birdie putt on 8 to get back
in the hunt.
To start the back nine, Slutzky began her move, making three straight
pars to pull into second place, two strokes off Albright’s pace.
But Albright got her lead back to three on the par-3 No. 13 as
Towersey and Slutzky bogeyed and she made par. Albright’s tee shot landed
on the edge of the left rough, 12 feet from the flag. She chipped up
close and sank her par putt.
Albright went up by four strokes at the par-4 No. 14, where Towersey
also took over second place. Towersey eventually won the runner-up battle
against Slutzky by making birdie at 18.
“It would’ve been great to finish second for my ego, but she’s great,”
Slutzky said of Towersey, who has won 17 of the last 20 women’s club
championships at Santa Ana Country Club and is tied for the all-time lead
in the Newport-Mesa community for club titles (men or women) with Dee Dee
White of Newport Beach.
Towersey, who finished at 80, made two of the three birdies in Tea Cup
Classic V on 2 and 18.
“It’s been a tough three weeks and I think today it kind of showed,”
said Towersey, whose mother, four-time Santa Ana champion Pat Cox,
underwent major surgery recently. “I felt I was going through the motions
... Debbie’s a great champion. She played well enough to win. She pulled
it out. I’m happy for her. But I’ll be back.”
The spirited Woodard, who has won six straight Mesa Verde titles, shot
5-over 40 on the front nine to remain in the heat of contention. Albright
carded a 38 at the turn, followed by Towersey and Woodard at 40 and
Slutzky at 42.
“I’m playing better than ever this year,” said Woodard, who has bagged
her “softball swing” and lowered her handicap from 9 to 4.
Slutzky, a Tea Cup Classic newcomer, felt the pressure of a large
gallery early in the round, but settled down and found her groove.
“Even when I didn’t hit great tee shots (on the back nine), I felt I
scrambled,” said Slutzky, who ended with four straight pars and was happy
shooting 3-over 39 on the back nine.
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