One sweet payday
Bryce Alderton
Tom Purtzer put a lot of trust in himself and his golf game before
Sunday’s final round of the Toshiba Senior Classic and the results
speak for themselves.
After a disheartening second round, Purtzer distanced himself from
the rest of the field to win his first Toshiba Senior Classic by one
stroke over Morris Hatalsky Sunday at Newport Beach Country Club. The
52-year-old Purtzer shot a 4-under-par 67 to finish 15-under (198),
just two days after he set the tournament record with a 60 in the
first round.
Purtzer two-putted the final green to seal his second Champions
Tour victory in a tournament he held at least a share of the lead
after each round.
The day started with Purtzer and Hatalsky each at 11-under while
John Jacobs and Keith Fergus each stood at 10-under. Jacobs finished
in third at 13-under (200) while Fergus came in fourth at 12-under
(201) after an eagle on the par-5 18th.
Purtzer bogeyed two holes, but needed just 27 putts compared to 34
in the second round.
“I just felt comfortable with my swing and worked hard in swing
deficiencies with the wedge game and putter, which helped a lot,”
said Purtzer, who earned a check for $240,000. “It helped playing
with Morris and Keith. They are both good friends.”
Purtzer and Hatalsky were college teammates briefly at Arizona
State and have each won on the PGA and Champions tours.
The two, along with Jacobs, jostled for position throughout the
round, especially on the back nine.
Purtzer took a two-shot lead over Hatalsky and Jacobs with a
tap-in birdie on the 492-yard par-5 15th, but his most critical shot
was yet to come.
On the par-4 16th, after hitting his drive into the deep rough,
Purtzer knocked a 7-iron onto the green, leaving himself a 30-footer
he slid just inside the cup to move to 16-under and three shots ahead
of both Hatalsky and Jacobs.
“The putt at 16 was the biggest one I made,” said Purtzer, who
last looked at a leaderboard after the par-4 14th hole.
Hatalsky tied Purtzer for the lead at 14-under with a 15-foot
birdie on the par-3 13th. Jacobs, playing in the group ahead of
Hatalsky, Purtzer and Fergus, moved within one stroke of the lead
with a birdie at the par-4 14th.
But opportunity eluded Jacobs on the 15th. After a 307-yard drive,
Jacobs hit an 8-iron for his second shot just short of the green and
it rolled into a bunker. He settled for par.
“I hit a good shot,” said Jacobs, 59, who lost to Gary McCord in a
five-hole playoff in the 1999 tournament. “If it would have gone a
foot more, it would have settled right by the hole.
“That was a hard shot for me since I don’t hit the ball high. I
almost would have been better going behind. I was [upset] heading to
the 16th tee.” Jacobs stayed two shots back with a par-saving, 6-foot
putt on the par-3 17th, but couldn’t tally an eagle or a par on the
510-yard par-5 18th.
Purtzer salvaged a par on the par-4 14th when his pitch found a
clearing around a tree and nearly rolled into the hole. Hatalsky
bogeyed the hole and moved two shots behind.
“I was praying a root was not underneath because that ball would
have been a lead weight,” Purtzer said. “I could have hit that shot
100 times and not hit it any better.
“I wanted to take care of my own business and not know what anyone
else is doing. I didn’t hear a roar on 18, so I had a sneaking
suspicion [Jacobs] didn’t birdie.”
Hatalsky birdied the par-5 18th to finish at 14-under (199).
Hatalsky fell two shots back of Purtzer after a bogey at the 16th.
He hit his second shot on 16 into the right greenside bunker couldn’t
make the up-and-down.
“I felt I had a cushion after 16,” Purtzer said. “On the 17th I
let up a little bit.” Purtzer bogeyed No. 17, but still had a
two-shot lead over Hatalsky heading to the 18th tee.
“Tom had good control of his game today,” Hatalsky said. “He was
very solid and there was no way he was going to give it to me. I
needed to go out and make birdies.”
Hatalsky took a one-stroke lead at 13-under when Purtzer made one
of his two bogeys in the round on the par-3 eighth.
But birdies on Nos. 10 and 12 -- both holes Purtzer birdied all
three days -- swung the momentum back in Purtzer’s favor.
“I made some loose swings coming down the stretch and began
putting too much pressure on my iron play,” said Hatalsky, who tied
for seventh in the 2002 tournament.
Purtzer’s best finish in two prior tournaments was a tie for 19th
last year.
Fergus shot a 2-under 69 to place fourth while Bruce Fleisher
carded a 67 to finish fifth (11-under). Lonnie Nielsen, David Eger
and D.A. Weibring all tied for sixth at 10-under followed by John
Bland, Dana Quigley and Leonard Thompson, who all tied for ninth at
9-under.
Bland carded a 65 for the day’s best round.
The day, however, belonged to Purtzer, who struggled to an
even-par 71 Saturday after soaring to a 60 in a record-setting first
round.
“Oftentimes when you shoot low rounds, you don’t have a good round
the next day,” Purtzer said. “Lanny [Wadkins] told me that if you
shoot low rounds every day, no one can beat you. My swing didn’t feel
as free [Saturday]. The bad [shots] cost me.” Purtzer reversed
fortune and cashed in on Sunday.
“The biggest thing is just trusting,” Purtzer said.
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