Driving home a golf classic
Golfers expect to pack their bags later this afternoon at the Newport
Beach Country Club as the eighth annual Toshiba Senior Classic runs its
course. Five years ago, those involved with the event feared it may have
run its course due to management problems.
Since co-chairmen Hank Adler and Jake Rohrer took over the reins at
that juncture, the event has raised $3.4 million for the Hoag Hospital
Foundation. In 2000, the event became the Senior Tour’s first stop to
raise $1 million.
On Wednesday, City Editor James Meier stopped by the course’s driving
range without his clubs to talk to Adler, a former Irvine Unified School
District board member, about the event’s successes under partly sunny
skies.
Q: What’s been your proudest accomplishment relating to the
tournament?
A: We’ve helped facilitate over the last 16 years about $6 million
worth of charity to Hoag Hospital. It’s just been a great thing. It’s not
my accomplishment. It’s the community’s accomplishment. All we do is help
facilitate it.
But it’s been a great run. Had a lot of fun. Hospital’s done real well
by it. It’s been a kick.
Q: What are your thoughts on this year’s tournament?
Q: Given 9/11, a couple years of bad weather behind us, it’s running
just as smooth as can be. We’re going to have a great tournament, great
weather over the weekend. The forecast for Friday, Saturday and Sunday is
darn near perfect.
We’re hoping to have big galleries. We’ve got 30 of the top 31 money
winners from last year, all five of the new entries. So, we’ll probably
have the best field of any Senior [PGA] event in the country this year.
So we’re on a roll. It’s going great.
Q: Obviously, it’s been a major change since five years ago.
A: Yeah. We’ve never quite figured that out. But, yeah, the first year
the hospital made about $600,000. We made $800,000 the second year. A
million the third year, $1.1 million last year. We’ll probably make a
little less this year -- a tough economy.
The fact we’re making as much as we are just is a tribute to this
community.
Q: Was there any consideration given to dropping it about five years
ago?
A: From the Hoag standpoint, we’ve been doing this for 27 years, and
we had had the Newport Classic for 17 years. We rolled into the Taco Bell
Newport Classic. We were making $300,000 a year. We stepped into the
shoes of the guys who weren’t doing a very good job. So that question
never wouldn’t have come up for us.
We thought we knew what we were doing and that we’d be able to pull
this off. The truth is, we had no idea what we were doing, but we hired
Jeff Purser and he did, so that’s just as good as knowing what you’re
doing.
Q: I’m sure you’re completely amazed at what it is today.
A: It’s just been a fabulous result. Jeff is walking over here and is
someone you should interview, but he’s probably the best hire I’ve made
in my career. He’s just done a fabulous job for us. The sponsors are
happy. So we’ve got the right charity, we’ve got the right people, got
the right community -- it’s just a great formula. It really is. It’s a
great deal.
Q: Are there any ideal changes you would make to the event?
A: Not really. It’s about as good as it gets. We’d love to have more
sponsors and more tents and more of a gallery, and every year it grows a
little bit. Everything’s moving in the right direction. I’d like to be
younger.
Q: What will Hoag use this year’s donations for?
A: All of about probably $80,000 or $90,000 will go the Hoag Women’s
Pavilion. That’s a huge project. The hospital has a $50-million campaign
going on for that. So all the proceeds will go to that. We did the
emergency room for a few years. Then we did the cancer clinic. Now we’re
doing the Women’s Pavilion. If we’re lucky 10 years from now, we’ll be
doing the heart center or something like that.
Q: What’s your favorite part of the event?
A: I love it all. And I really like the community breakfast. We had
Fuzzy Zoeller speak [Tuesday]. He was just letter fabulous. And, you
know, we’ve had these great playoffs on Sunday afternoon. And everybody
you know shows up sometime during the weekend. It’s just a great week.
Q: Any final thoughts?
A: No. Keep the weather gods in our favor.
Q: This doesn’t run until Sunday.
A: By then we’ll know all about it. The ground is solid. I mean, we
can play in almost anything. It’s a lot more fun when it’s not raining.
BIO
Name: Hank Adler
Age: 55
Residence: Irvine for 30 years
Occupation: Accountant; partner with Deloitte & Touche
Education: Bachelor’s degree from UCLA; master’s degree from Anderson
School of Business
Family: Wife of 31 years Marcia, daughters Julie and Sally
Community involvement: Co-chair of the Toshiba Senior Classic;
treasurer of the Hoag Hospital Foundation; four years, including a
one-year stint as president, on the Irvine Unified School District; board
member of the Center of Democracy at UC Irvine
Hobbies: Golf, reading and history
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.