Wyrick back to school
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BRYCE ALDERTON
Eighty players and only seven spots.
Those are numbers Keith Wyrick, a starter at Newport Beach Golf
Course, will contemplate the next two months as he attempts to earn
one of seven spots on the Champions Tour, also known as the Senior
PGA Tour.
Wyrick, who will turn 50 in December, sent $2,500 along with an
application to the tour earlier this week for the 72-hole qualifying
tournament in Southern California -- Nov. 4-7 at Oak Valley Golf Club
in Beaumont -- that will feature 18 players. The top 16 from
Beaumont, along with each of the four other qualifying sites (one in
San Antonio, Texas, and three in Florida) will advance to the
national finals, held Nov. 18-21 in Coral Gables, Fla. Seven out of
the 80 golfers assembled in Coral Gables will then have the right to
call themselves Champions Tour members.
If Wyrick were to make the tour, he would join a select few --
Allen Doyle and Tom Wargo -- who didn’t play on the PGA Tour prior to
joining the Champions circuit, for golfers age 50 and older. Doyle
won this year’s Fleet Boston Classic and ranks sixth on the tour’s
2003 money list with $1.1 million. Wargo ranks 31st in career
earnings on the Champions Tour.
“There are two different classes: guys who played on [the PGA
Tour] and guys like myself who maybe were steelworkers or car
salesmen,” Wyrick said. “[The Champions Tour] is definitely making it
rough to earn a spot out there. The cards are so limited.”
The Champions Tour used to issue 16 cards, Wyrick said.
“Doyle was very dominating for three years,” he added.
Wyrick has been no slouch himself in 2003. He has two first-place
finishes, two seconds, two thirds and a fifth in seven tournaments on
the 47-Plus Tour in Arizona. Champions Tour members Danny Edwards and
Jose Maria Canizares have played on the 47-Plus circuit. Wyrick has
won a total of seven times in Arizona.
“In the last three years I have averaged 40 tournaments a year,”
Wyrick said. “I view it as raising a family and making money while
going to college. It is three years to work on your game, see what
the competition is like and determine what state your game is in.”
The average check Wyrick has received can total $5,000, with
second place receiving $1,200 or $1,000 and $350 going to the
third-place finisher.
“If you are not in the top five, you are not doing what needs to
be done to survive out there,” Wyrick said.
Wyrick, who has also competed on the Cadillac Tight Lies and Sun
Belt Tours, said if he can average 70, he should qualify for the
Champions Tour. His scoring average is 69.2.
“Par is 288, so a 280 would probably get on the Champions Tour,”
he said. “But I don’t like to look at numbers ... just take it one
shot at a time.”
Doyle credits his improved play to new clubs -- made by Parallax
Access Golf. The irons have a bend in the bottom of the shaft that
Wyrick said has made for a higher ball flight.
He also thanks Chris Jones and Steve Lane, co-owners of Newport
Beach Golf Course, who have adjusted Wyrick’s schedule to allow the
17-year course employee to pursue a novel endeavor.
Wyrick, whose family includes his 3 1/2-year-old son Robbie, who
is autistic, wife Peggy and stepson Lawrence, traveled with him to
Arizona for four of the seven tournaments. But now that school has
begun for Peggy, a teacher, and the children, they will stay at the
family’s home in Huntington Beach and root for Keith.
School has also begun for Wyrick. He played this week at Bear
Creek Golf Club in Murietta and at Oak Valley, gearing up for his
biggest exam yet.
“It will be a very difficult thing,” Wyrick said of earning his
tour card. “I think about it quite a bit at night. I plan on playing
through next year and if I don’t make it, I can get a job at
Wal-Mart.”
Hopefully we will be talking of Wyrick’s first Champions Tour
events this time next year.
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