Newport Beach, CA, March 01, 2010 -
Already a
leading innovation among Champions Tour events, the 80-player field for this
week’s Toshiba Classic at Newport Beach Country Club is emblematic of the
Champions Tour at its best – a well-rounded, competitive blend of its golf
legends and icons, its veterans who are presently among the Tour’s upper crust,
and its new members who have excelled in their past life on the PGA TOUR and are
pushing the current hierarchy for Champions Tour prominence.
Headlining
the field for the $1.7 million Toshiba Classic are 2009 British Open runner-up Tom
Watson, 2008 and 2009 Champions Tour Player of
the Year and Arnold Palmer Award (money list) and Byron Nelson Award (low
scoring average) winner Bernhard Langer and Champions Tour rookie Fred Couples. That trio won
the first three events on the Champions Tour heading into the Toshiba Classic,
Southern California’s only Champions Tour event.
The Toshiba Classic awards
a $255,000 winner’s check and is televised on Golf Channel on Friday, March 5
from 3:30-5:30 p.m. PT, on Saturday, March 6 from 3:30-6:30 p.m. PT and Sunday,
March 7, from 4-6:30 p.m. PT. Daily tickets for the Toshiba Classic are $25 at
the gate. Clubhouse badges, providing admission to the grounds and clubhouse for
practice rounds and the tournament, are $100. All tickets and corporate
packages can be obtained by calling 949-660-1001 or at www.ToshibaClassic.com.
The Toshiba
Classic field features 11 World Golf Hall of Famers, 23 PGA TOUR major
champions and 22 Champions Tour major winners, and accounts for 505 PGA TOUR
titles (47 majors) and 355 Champions Tour titles (51 majors). With 29 PGA TOUR
(six majors) and 29 Champions Tour titles, Hall of Famer Lee Trevino is the
oldest player in the field at 70. The golf icon will be making his second
Champions Tour start of 2010.
“This may be the best field we’ve
ever had,” Toshiba Classic Tournament Executive Director Jeff Purser said. “Between
the 11 World Golf Hall of Famers and the
eight past Toshiba Classic champions that our loyal golf fans can reminisce
about, hosting every current Champions Tour superstar, and the exciting quality
and depth of the 2010 Champions Tour rookie class, the Orange County community
and Southern California golf fans could not realistically dream of a more
accomplished group of golfers.”
The Toshiba Classic will host
three of the 2009 Champions Tour’s major winners – 2009 Charles Schwab Cup
points champion Loren Roberts (Senior British Open), Fred Funk (U.S. Senior
Open) and Mike Reid (JELD-WEN Tradition) – and Orange County fan favorites like
Corona del Mar resident John Cook and former Mission Viejo resident and 2009
Toshiba Classic runner-up Mark O’Meara.
“I can’t thank Toshiba enough for
the commitment they’ve made to the Toshiba Classic. It’s a great event. I think
a lot of the players get excited about playing there,” O’Meara said. “We’ve had
a lot of nice champions there and I just hope I can play well … and have an
opportunity to win.
“What’s nice about the Champions
Tour and the Toshiba Classic is the fact we have pretty good branding. We have
nice players the fans can identify with who have had nice careers. On the
Champions Tour, the depth and quality of fields has evolved over the years.
Three rounds, it’s basically a shootout. I think that’s good for the fans, good
for TV, to see guys scoring and making birdies and the possibility for making
eagles coming down the stretch.”
A full stock of the best
Champions Tour rookies of 2010 will be among the Toshiba Classic field –
Couples, Corey Pavin, Paul Azinger, Tommy Armour III, who finished second in
his Champions Tour debut two weeks ago, David Frost and Murrieta resident Tom
Pernice Jr., who has two top-25 finishes on the 2010 PGA TOUR.
Additionally, 2006 U.S. Ryder Cup
captain Tom Lehman will make his Toshiba Classic debut while playing his first
full Champions Tour season. This will mark the first Champions Tour event in
which 2009 United States President’s Cup captain Couples, 2010 U.S. Ryder Cup
captain Corey Pavin and 2008 U.S. Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger will play
together.
“I’ve never played Newport Beach Country Club, but everyone I’ve talked
to who has played it said it would be a good golf course for me. I hope that
analysis is correct,” Pavin said. “I try not to pass up the opportunity to play
West Coast tournaments. Over my career, I’ve had good success on the West
Coast.”
Argentina’s Eduardo Romero will have his hands full defending his
Toshiba Classic crown against, arguably, the best field in the Toshiba
Classic’s 16-year history. Last year, Romero shot a final-round 3-under-par 68, rolling in
four birdies on the first six holes on the back nine to become the fourth
international (non-U.S.) player to win the Toshiba Classic. Romero’s 11-under-par
202 gave him his fourth victory in his last 10 Champions Tour starts, fifth Champions
Tour win overall and his 100th professional triumph worldwide.
Apart from Romero, past Toshiba Classic champions returning to the
friendly confines of the par-71, 6,591-yard Newport Beach Country Club include
Jim Colbert (1996), Hale Irwin (the Classic’s only two-time winner, in 1998 and 2002, and the Champions
Tour’s all-time leading money winner with a Champions Tour record 45 titles), Gary
McCord (1999), Allen Doyle (2000), Tom Purtzer (2004) and Langer (2008).
World Golf
Hall of Fame members entered in the Toshiba Classic include Isao Aoki, Ben
Crenshaw, Irwin, Tom Kite, Langer, Larry Nelson, Nick Price, Curtis Strange,
Trevino, Lanny Wadkins and Watson.
Crenshaw,
Kite, Langer, Strange, Trevino, Wadkins and Watson were also past Ryder Cup
captains. Of this group, Germany’s Langer was the only one to captain the
European team. Other past U.S. Ryder Cup captains in the field include San
Bernardino native and Redlands resident Dave Stockton and Hal Sutton.
Watson
began 2010 by winning the Wendy’s Champions Skins Game in Maui before besting
Couples in a final-round duel at the Mitsubishi Electric Championship at
Hualalai to gain his 13th Champions Tour title and his first since
turning 60 in September. Watson became the 15th player to win on the
Champions Tour at age 60 or older. The most decorated golfer in the
field, Watson owns eight major championships and 13 Champions Tour titles,
including six majors.
Langer, inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame
in 2002, was named the inaugural World No. 1 when the Official World Golf Rankings
were introduced in 1986. With his victory in the Allianz Championship a week
ago, Langer has tallied nine Champions Tour titles in three years.
The Toshiba Classic’s lead charity and operator is Hoag Hospital
Foundation. During the last 12 years, the Toshiba Classic has generated more
than $12.1 million for charity, the most on the Champions Tour. Hoag Hospital
Foundation also received the inaugural PGA Champions Tour Charity of the Year
Award in 1998.
Toshiba Classic supporters can
congregate online at its official fan pages on Facebook (www.facebook.com, search “Toshiba Classic”)
and Twitter (www.twitter.com/ToshibaClassic). Register to become a fan or follower of the Toshiba Classic at each
fan page, meet and chat with new friends and golf fans, and stay up to date on
all tournament and player information. Tournament information,
statistics, activities and updates are also available at the tournament’s
official web site, www.ToshibaClassic.com.
The Toshiba Classic
Hoag Hospital
Foundation produces the annual Toshiba Classic. During the last 12 years, the
Toshiba Classic has generated more than $12.1 million for charity, the most on
the Champions Tour. Televised domestically to over 81 million households on The
Golf Channel, and an additional 86 million households internationally, the
Toshiba Classic provides invaluable exposure for the communities of Orange
County. In addition, the tournament generates an estimated $25 million in
annual economic impact, benefiting the businesses of Newport Beach and Orange
County. For more information, please call 949/660-1001 or log onto
ToshibaClassic.com.