Toshiba Senior Classic Golf: Irwin turns the corner
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Even with another dirt-low round Saturday, Hale
Irwin is still rolling up his sleeves and grinding, like a mechanic
tinkering with a finely tuned race car.
Irwin, the Senior PGA Tour’s all-time leading money winner and career
leader in victories with 33 tournament titles, started with a new set of
golf clubs before the eighth annual Toshiba Senior Classic at Newport
Beach Country Club, and, on moving day, began to run away from the
77-player field before an estimated crowd of 24,000 in perfect weather
conditions.
Speaking of perfect, Irwin, who shot 7-under-par 64 in the second
round to build a three-stroke lead heading into today’s final round, is
still trying to get there.
“I’m going to try a new 3-wood and a new 4-wood right now. They’re
waiting for me at the driving range,” Irwin said. “You’re always
perfecting.”
Irwin, the 1998 Toshiba Classic champion, said “it’s always fun to
play in the last group on Sunday,” and he’ll get that chance today as he
tries to become the tournament’s first two-time winner.
Allen Doyle, the 2000 Toshiba winner, Larry Nelson and Gil Morgan are
tied for second at 8-under and will try to catch Irwin. Tied for fifth at
7-under are Don Pooley, Walter Hall and Monday qualifier Michael Zinni.
“Keep ‘em coming,” Irwin quipped after Friday’s first round, referring
to his age (56) and ability to seemingly stave off a new crop of
50-year-olds each year, while continuing to dominate the Senior Tour.
Irwin birdied the par-4 No. 16 to separate himself from Doyle and move
to 10-under. Irwin’s lead stretched to two strokes when Doyle bogeyed the
par-3 17, after hitting his tee shot in the right bunker.
With the ropes dropped behind Irwin and Doyle for fans to follow at
18, Irwin birdied the par-5 finishing hole, where a bunker shot from 60
feet landed three feet from the flag.
“I hit a lot of fairways and greens,” said Irwin, who won the ’98
Toshiba with a course-record 62 in the final round with the help of the
Famous Bunker Rake at 17, which stopped his tee shot from rolling in the
water.
“When I shot that 62, I don’t want to say it was a miracle, but I was
making putts that day and greens were not as smooth as they are now,”
said Irwin, who has won 17 of 22 events in which he has led or been tied
for the lead after 36 holes on the Senior Tour.
But how important is the second round in this tournament? In the
previous seven events, the 36-hole leader has won the event just twice --
including Doyle’s rain-shortened victory. Jim Colbert enjoyed a monstrous
five-stroke lead after the second round in 1996 and eventually won the
second annual Toshiba Senior Classic by two shots.
Irwin made eight birdies Saturday, but it was his par at the par-4 No.
7 that “turned things around.”
Irwin hit a “very poor 2-iron” to the green, but recovered with a nice
sand wedge to within three feet of the pin on the most severe green on
the 6,584-yard layout.
Irwin, who hit a tree on the hole, called it “a miracle par.” But he
didn’t climb to the top of the leaderboard until the back nine.
At the par-3 No. 13, Irwin stroked a smooth 5-iron to within three
feet and made an easy birdie putt to fall to 8-under, creating a
three-way logjam at the top with Doyle and Nelson.
Then Doyle birdied 13 to drop to 9-under, but that lead lasted only
two holes, because Irwin birdied the par-5 No. 15, the easiest hole on
the golf course, to square matters.
“(The greens) are still a little bumpy, but they’re much more mature
these greens,” Irwin said. “They’ve done a wonderful job with these
greens. In fact, they’ve gone a wonderful job with the whole golf course.
It’s very difficult now to say that a ball took a bad bounce. The ball
rolls pretty true.”
Irwin added that part of the challenge at this stage in his career is
the challenge itself.
“You’re always trying to get better, every hole, every day, every
week,” said the three-time U.S. Open Championship winner, who won this
year’s ACE Group Classic in Florida for his Senior Tour-record 33rd
title.
Tom Watson, who started the second round with 12 straight rounds of
par or better, the longest streak on the Senior Tour this year, went
south quick on Saturday, but rallied on the back nine and finished at
1-over 72.
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