Toshiba time for Newport
Bryce Alderton
The 11th Toshiba Senior Classic tees off today at Newport Beach
Country Club with the threat of rain in the air and 78 golfers aiming
for the top prize.
Newport Beach Country Club head golf professional Paul Hahn,
making his second straight tournament appearance, John Harris and Pat
McGowan get things started at 8:10 this morning and 75 PGA Champions
Tour golfers, all 50 and older, will follow.
Players stressed the importance of keeping the ball in the fairway
and maneuvering safely on sometimes tricky greens as keys to victory
this week, but a closer look revealed just what holes could factor
into who will hold the trophy.
Several golfers were asked which holes pose the most problems on
the par-71 course that measures 6,584 yards.
The latter half of the front nine generated the most responses.
“Eight is a long hole [the par-3 measures 203 yards from the
championship tees], you have to hit the right club,” said John Bland,
who tied for ninth at last year’s Toshiba. “Nine [a par-4 dogleg
right into the wind] is a tough driving hole that’s narrow with trees
on the right. If you go in the rough, seldom do you get it on the
green.”
The eighth was the most difficult hole during the 2003 tournament,
yielding the fewest birdies. The ninth garnered the same distinction
in 1998.
The 418-yard par-4 sixth rendered the most double bogeys of any
front-nine hole in the 2003 Toshiba.
Then there is the green on the par-4 seventh hole, which slopes
severely from back to front.
“That green has all sorts of trouble,” Rodger Davis, the 2003
Toshiba champion, said. “If you get through 5-9, you will do well in
the tournament.
D.A. Weibring, who finished tied for sixth in last year’s Toshiba,
said holes 5, 6 and 8 were the toughest on the front side followed by
Nos. 14, 16 and 17 on the back nine.
“Greens can get tricky,” Weibring said. “Low scoring depends on
how challenging the weather gets. If there are softer greens, the
scores will go down.”
A 70% chance of showers is forecasted for both today and Saturday,
according to the web site, weather.com.
Golfers contended with warm, dry and windy conditions earlier in
the week, but damp and overcast skies prevailed most of Thursday
during the second of the two-day Classic Pro-Am.
Defending champion Tom Purtzer joins former Masters champions
Fuzzy Zoeller and Ben Crenshaw in this morning’s 10:22 grouping while
Hale Irwin, the Champions Tour’s leader in victories (42), Jim Thorpe
and Larry Nelson are scheduled to tee off at 10:55.
Purtzer tied the Champions Tour’s 18-hole scoring record with an
11-under 60 in the first round last year, tallying nine birdies and
an eagle.
The championship features 25 of the top 30 players from the
Champions Tour’s 2004 money list including Irwin (2), Gil Morgan (4),
Bruce Fleisher (5), Nelson (6) Mark McNulty (7) Weibring (8), Thorpe
(9) and Allen Doyle (10), the 2000 Toshiba champion.
Irwin has won twice in five events this year and joins Des Smyth,
last week’s winner at the SBC Classic, and Dana Quigley, who claimed
the season-opening MasterCard Championship in the field.
Quigley ranks second to Irwin in the season-long Charles Schwab
Cup points race, designed to identify the Champions Tour’s top
player. Toshiba will mark Quigley’s 253rd straight event overall,
dating to the start of the 1998 season.
Major championship winners Raymond Floyd and Curtis Strange are
also entered into the 78-player field, with the winner slated to
receive $247,500.
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