Tea Cup Classic competition tightening following Friday’s drama
Richard Dunn
Along with Debbie Albright’s victory in Tea Cup Classic V and the
tightest foursome in event history comes what appears to be renewed vigor
for players not only to compete in the women’s event, but win it.
Only six strokes was the difference between first and fourth place
Friday in the fifth annual celebration of women’s club champions in the
Newport-Mesa community at Newport Beach Country Club.
Albright, focused from the start on her home course, seemed to play
with more confidence as Tea Cup Classic V stretched into the back nine,
where the six-time women’s club champion at Newport Beach made five
straight pars (12 through 16) while hitting every green imaginably.
And, with Albright’s Tea Cup title and continually improving golf
game, she should give three-time Tea Cup champion Marianne Towersey of
Santa Ana Country Club a run for her money every summer, assuming both
maintain their respective reign at their clubs.
Mesa Verde Country Club champion Denise Woodard’s game is also getting
better, while Tea Cup Classic newcomer Olivia Slutzky of Big Canyon
Country Club drew rave reviews with her potential to become a big-time
player.
“I’d love to get ahold of her (and teach her),” a local club pro said.
“The Tea Cup Classic is awesome,” said Slutzky, who recovered nicely
from a rocky start to shoot 3-over 39 on the back nine, where she once
pulled to within two strokes of the lead. “I wish there was a Tea Cup
every month, to play with that kind of pressure.”
While Slutzky was the fourth different Big Canyon representative in
four straight Tea Cup Classics, following Selby Schriber, Sally Holstein
and Colette Taormina, she’s hoping to keep her club title for a long time
and become a top amateur player.
“My goal this year is to make the Mid-Amateur,” said Slutzky, who will
try to qualify Sept. 4 at Chula Vista for the Women’s U.S. Mid-Amateur
Championship in St. Louis this fall, after qualifying for her first
Mid-Amateur championship last year at her home course.
“My long-term goal, of course, is that I would love to have a great
amateur career, to be another Marianne Towersey, to be the person to
beat, and I’m going to work as hard as I can to get there.”
Slutzky, who played in front of family, friends and Big Canyon club
members last year in the Women’s U.S. Mid-Amateur, got a taste of a large
gallery in Tea Cup Classic V.
Slutzky said she was “tense” during the first four holes, “then I
relaxed and everything flew by. By the time I knew it, we were at 16 and
I thought, ‘Wow, this went fast!’ But the first four holes felt like it
took an hour. Maybe it did. Maybe it was two hours.”
While the pace was slow early, it picked up, just as Slutzky’s game
did on the back nine, where she had seven pars and finished within a
stroke of second place.
The estimated gallery of 250 did not make Slutzky nervous. In fact,
she said “it was fun. It makes you really excited to be a golfer.
Hopefully next year I’ll win.”
Prior to tea off Friday in Tea Cup Classic V, folks were talking about
Ben Crenshaw’s appearance at Newport Beach Country Club to play the
course before next year’s Toshiba Senior Classic.
Crenshaw, who will turn 50 on Jan. 11 and become eligible for the
Senior PGA Tour, played the front nine with Newport Beach Country Club
President Jerry Anderson, who was delighted with his morning assignment.
Crenshaw, the 1995 Masters champion, and Fuzzy Zoeller (eligible Nov.
11) will be two of the biggest names to join the Senior Tour in 2002.
Chad Towersey, former Corona del Mar High standout, caddied for his
mother, Marianne, in Tea Cup Classic V.
Chad Towersey will play in the 29th annual Costa Mesa city
championships Saturday and Sunday at Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club.
After the four ladies teed off with beautiful shots in Tea Cup Classic
V, rules official Paul Hahn, the head professional at Newport Beach
Country Club, quipped: “Hey, you’re not going to see four better shots
than that. These gals are good, baby.”
“It seems like the galleries get bigger and better every year,” a lady
in the gallery came up to me and said.
With age comes, perhaps, increased interest, especially with new
players every year (all from Big Canyon), except in the first two Tea Cup
Classics, and the suspense of some truly fine lady golfers battling in an
18-hole stroke-play shootout at four rotating private country clubs
serving as hosts.
But, now, with the men in the Jones Cup, we’re essentially asking the
four clubs to double its hosting load within the four-club rotation.
Santa Ana Country Club, for example, drew No. 2 out of the original
hat when the Daily Pilot started the Tea Cup Classic in 1997 and the club
a year later hosted Tea Cup Classic II.
With the Jones Cup, a pro-am better-ball of partners designed for the
men’s club champions and the club’s head pro or director of golf, it’s an
event that continues to promote club golf champions in the Newport-Mesa
community and allows for each of the four clubs to share in ownership of
the tournament.
Under the same flexibly arranged rotation, SACC would be in line, if
it wishes, to host Tea Cup Classic VI in the summer of 2002. (To Mike
Reehl, SACC Director of Golf: My request letter’s in the mail).
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