Bryce AldertonSo how does a four-time champion...
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Bryce Alderton
So how does a four-time champion of a tournament that will be played
for the seventh time Friday explain her success?
Simple. It’s the people.
“The great thing about the Tea Cup is that it is fun to have
friends following you,” Marianne Towersey said about the annual event
that pits the four women’s club champions of Newport-Mesa’s four
private golf courses against one another for a one-day, 18-hole
stroke play event. “It kind of spruces me up in support unlike any
tournament I play in.
“I generally don’t have a lot of friends watching and rooting for
me, so that is a fun aspect to it. I think that has helped me
succeed. The mental edge has been the difference.”
Towersey, who won her unprecedented 19th Santa Ana Country Club
championship in May, has claimed Tea Cup titles in 1998, ‘99, 2000
and again last year, when she needed to sink an 11-foot birdie putt
on the par-five 18th hole to erase Olivia Slutzky’s (Big Canyon)
chances of winning. Towersey fired a two-over-par 74 that September
day on her home course to beat Slutzky by one stroke and Mesa Verde’s
Akemi Khaiat by two shots.
Heading into the 1 p.m. start Friday at Mesa Verde in Tea Cup VII,
Towersey said Khaiat has the home course advantage.
“Mesa Verde is a great venue and Akemi is the one to beat,”
Towersey sad. “She is a great golfer. [Akemi] definitely has the
competitive edge with the national tournaments she has played in.”
Towersey is getting her share of national-tournament experience
this year. She recently competed in the 103rd Women’s Western Amateur
Golf Championship in Urbana, Ill., June 16-20 followed by the North
and South Amateur at Pinehurst.
“I didn’t do well,” Towersey said of her performance in the two
events. “I shot 154 [over two days] in each tournament during
qualifying. I lost in the first round in the Western and didn’t make
the cut [31 players advanced out of 119] at Pinehurst. But I did beat
a third to half of the field of college kids.
“It is remarkable how strong these girls are and how dedicated
they are to the game. I outhit some of them, but a few knock it 30 to
40 yards past me.”
Towersey, 52, won the Women’s Golf Association of California
championship in May at Coto de Caza Golf & Racquet Club, defeating
Corey Weworski, 2 up. The five-day tournament pitted women’s club
champions from the Northern and Southern California Golf Associations
against one another in match play.
Towersey also won the event in 1981 and again four years ago.
“It was a great win with the competition from the North and the
South,” she said. “We beat the North as a team, so that was a feather
in our cap.”
In September Towersey will play in the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur
at Barton Creek Resort and Club in Austin, Texas, and in October will
tee it up in the Women’s Mid-Amateur at Long Cove Golf Club in Hilton
Head, S.C. She got to the round of 16 in each event last year.
She is considering adding another wedge and is experimenting with
a 7-wood for added distance.
Accuracy is where Towersey, who began playing golf at age 4, said
she puts a premium when it comes to golf.
“It is the same old swing, and usually works well, ‘usually’ being
the operative term,” she said.
As far as the Tea Cup goes, it has gotten the job done.
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