Golf: Toshiba Classic gladly moves one week back
Richard Dunn
Weather has always been a factor in the Toshiba Senior Classic, but
this year officials of the Senior PGA Tour event at Newport Beach Country
Club are hoping for the best.
Played last year in Week 9 on the Senior Tour schedule, the event not
only managed to complete its 54-hole tournament, but got through its
pro-ams, albeit one group was limited to nine holes in a modified
afternoon format.
After five weeks of rain leading up to the 2001 Toshiba Classic, the
sixth week was mostly just dark clouds and a rainy forecast as Tournament
Director Jeff Purser once again walked Mother Nature’s fine line in early
March.
Purser has lobbied hard to the Senior Tour about changing the date of
the event, and, with record numbers donated to charity, he had two very
solid legs on which to stand.
“This week took five years off my life,” Purser said after last year’s
tournament, in which the weather forecast was the No. 1 topic of
discussion.
“In my four years here, every day in March seems to be better ... I
want 70 degrees and sunny,” added Purser, who eventually won his argument
with the Senior Tour as the Toshiba Classic, which gave another cool $1
million-plus to charity last year, was granted a schedule change.
This year’s event will be played March 4-10, which moves the
tournament back one week -- to Week 10 on the schedule.
The Toshiba Classic now falls in the middle of the tour’s West Coast
Swing, after the SBC Senior Classic in Valencia and before the Siebel
Classic in San Jose.
“We believe this is an advantageous position in the schedule,” Purser
said. “This move should help us continue to deliver one of the strongest
professional fields on tour.”
On the final day of last year’s Toshiba, rain was in the afternoon
forecast and tour officials wanted to double the tee times in the
morning. But Purser said no and the gamble paid off. In fact, nine extra
holes were played that day in a playoff without a drop of rain.
On the heels of the final-round cancellation in 2000 because of
inclement weather, Purser insisted that fans and sponsors deserved an
opportunity to watch golf in the afternoon -- just in case the weather
stayed dry. He rolled the dice and won.
The Senior Tour Qualifying School Class of 2000 did themselves proud
during the 2001 season.
Not only did three of the 16 win tournaments, but five of them
finished among the top 31 money leaders who earned fully exempt status
for 2002.
Leading the way on the money list was Bob Gilder (No. 8), followed by
Sammy Rachels (18th), John Schroeder (27th), Terry Mauney (29th) and Hugh
Baiocchi (30th).
Mauney, if you recall, was the second-round leader of the Toshiba
Classic last March, firing an 8-under-par 63 to tie a second-round record
in the Newport Beach event.
Mauney, a former sports reporter and anchor for a CBS television
affiliate in Charlotte, N.C., birdied six of the nine holes on the back
nine in his bogey-free round, including a 22-footer on the par-3 17th.
Gilder, one of five first-round leaders, followed his opening 65 with
a 5-under 66.
In the final round, Jose Maria Canizares defeated Gil Morgan in a
memorable nine-hole playoff.
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