Golf: It’s first things first at Santa Ana Country Club
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Richard Dunn
It will be a prominent kickoff to the centennial celebration of
Santa Ana Country Club, the oldest golf club in Orange County, when the
curtain is lifted on the club’s remodeling project.
“It’s going to be beautiful. It is beautiful ... what we’re seeing is
beautiful,” SACC Director of Golf Mike Reehl said.
In September 2001, the club will officially turn 100 years old. There
will be tournaments and parties and jubilees then, but before members
hold their champagne glasses up, a stroke of interior and exterior
refurbishing will be complete.
By the end of this year, the updating of the club’s terrace room, card
room, trophy case, hallway and men’s locker room is expected to be
finished.
“It’s almost done,” said Reehl, considered Mr. Santa Ana Country Club
in the minds of many with his upbringing and years of service to the
club.
In 1901, California’s enthusiasm for golf started to grow and 43 new
courses were built, including the first site and forerunner of the
present Santa Ana Country Club.
The five original clubs of the Southern California Golf Association in
1899 included Los Angeles Country Club, Riverside Polo and Golf Club,
Redlands Golf Club, Pasadena Golf Club and Santa Monica Golf Club. Of
those, only Los Angeles and Redlands exist today.
At the turn of the last century, sports-minded enthusiasts in Orange
County didn’t want to be left behind, so they banded together to form
Santiago Golf Club in 1901 and the first golf holes were played in Orange
County.
The club’s original 14 members, led by president R.S. Sanborn, leased
acreage from James Irvine in the Peters Canyon area, a small valley two
miles southwest of present-day Irvine Park.
The first group laid out a nine-hole course with fairways of native
soil, not grass, and oil-soaked sand “greens” about 30 feet in diameter.
As Santa Ana moves closer to its centennial celebration, a historical
look at the club will be provided in this space periodically.
In the 19th annual SACC Member/Member Championship, Eric Pepys and
Frank Robitaille won low net while Dave Bock and Gregg Hemphill captured
low gross, shooting 64-68--132 in the better ball of partners.
Low net runners-up were John Mullins and Lew Schmid, while Ed Shumaker
and Wayne Searcey finished third.
Low gross runners-up were Jake Klohs and Duane Hastings (138), while
Boyd Martin and Brian Towersey were third (141).
This weekend, SACC will host its Senior Gross Championship, a two-day,
36-hole stroke-play event. Dan Bird is the defending champion, shooting
76-79--155 last year.
Dennis Harwood of Big Canyon Country Club has been elected to the 2001
Southern California Golf Association Board of Directors.
Harwood, a rules official for the United States Golf Association, was
co-chairman of the U.S. Women’s Mid-Amateur Championship at Big Canyon in
early October.
Harwood, a former Newport Harbor High basketball player (circa ‘56),
is also a member at Indian Ridge Country Club in Palm Desert.
Big Canyon’s Ron Livingston, who retired from the SCGA board, was
accorded an SCGA life membership. Livingston will remain active as a
member of the Golf Course Management, Inc., board.
Big Canyon will host a Southern California PGA Educational Seminar on
merchandising next Wednesday.
The third annual Myron McNamara Memorial Golf Tournament is Nov. 13 at
Los Serranos Golf and Country Club in Chino Hills.
McNamara, who coached the UC Irvine men’s tennis team to six NCAA
Division II championships, was a longtime coach in the Newport-Mesa
community.
McNamara also built and managed tennis clubs, including the modern-day
Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club, Riviera Tennis Club in Pacific Palisades
and La Costa in San Diego County.
The upcoming event benefits the Myron McNamara Endowment Fund at UCI.
UCI men’s tennis coach Steve Clark is a Newport Beach resident. Details:
(949) 824-8366.
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