Resilient Redfern finally reaches top
BRYCE ALDERTON
After years of knocking at the door, Martha Redfern finally found the
key to unlock her first Big Canyon Country Club ladies championship.
Well, maybe a few keys.
“I took it one stroke at a time and I tried to eliminate the big
boo-boos and mental mistakes,” said Redfern, who claimed the title
with a six-shot victory over two-time defending champion Sally
Holstein last month.
Holstein held a one-shot lead after the first day, but Redfern
reversed order with a 6-over-par 78 on Day Two to move ahead by eight
strokes and a comfortable cushion from there.
Redfern said birdies at Nos. 10 and 11 during the second round
boosted her confidence.
She sealed her victory with a content par on the treacherous par-5
18th, exercising demons of rounds past.
Redfern, 43, runner-up to the ladies title the last several years
-- she joined Big Canyon in 1998 after moving from Mesa Verde Country
Club -- remembered one year when she came oh so close to tasting
victory.
“One year I had a two-stroke lead heading to the 18th hole,”
Redfern said. “I had a 70-yard shot in, but dumped it into the lake.
I lost in the playoff.”
She fared much better on the final hole on the finishing day this
time.
The 18th features a lake fronting the green, out of bounds right
and left and sand traps to cause even more sweat to bead on the
forehead.
Redfern split the fairway with her drive and landed on the green
safely in three shots and made par.
The victory seemed only a matter of time for Redfern, a 3
handicapper who started playing the game after her husband, Wayne,
bought her a set of clubs when the two were dating.
“His gift to me was giving me lessons,” Redfern, who played tennis
in high school and also showed horses, said. “He started young with
no lessons, so he figured it would prevent me from bad habits.”
It didn’t take long for Redfern, who has two boys ages 8 and 10,
to develop a love for the game.
“I love the competition and playing the game. I wish I would have
started younger, but what can you do?” Redfern said.
The love has translated to progressively lower scores, for
Redfern, who owns her own jewelry business. She attributes her rise
in golf to determination and a healthy dose of enjoyment.
She still takes lessons from two instructors, one being Big Canyon
head professional Clint Whitehill.
Whitehill, Redfern and Big Canyon men’s club champion Mike
Carpenter reached the quarterfinals of the Lexus Challenge, an event
that pits clubs from across Southern California in a nine-hole, best
ball competition against one another. Each club features a male and
female amateur and a pro.
The series airs on Fox Sports Net.
The Big Canyon trio was just two victories shy of representing
Southern California for the championship in Hawaii.
Redfern hopes to be in Richmond,Texas, come September.
For the first time, she will attempt to qualify for the United
States Golf Association’s women’s mid-amateur, scheduled Sept. 10-15
at Shadow Hawk Golf Club.
And why not.
Big Canyon will be one of two California sites hosting qualifying
rounds for the USGA women’s mid-am on Aug. 18.
Redfern figures she is on a roll and hopes it will continue.
“I have never been close to qualifying,” she said. “This year was
my year to win [the ladies club title], maybe it’s my year to
qualify. It’s my home course so there’s no excuse.”
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