That was why it was impressive that the inaugural Mariners Christian School Fall Golf Classic did so well a couple of weeks ago.
The event was sponsored by Northwestern Mutual, The Waltos Group and Bob Waltos and the cadre of volunteers put together a pretty good tournament.
A full field for an event is 144 golfers and the tournament had more than 100. Waltos is confident next year will be full and it is hard to disagree with him.
I have always thought having a scramble event at Newport Beach Country Club is a perfect place because the course can play to so many different levels of golfers. It is a relatively short course so the beginners and short hitters don’t get overwhelmed, but the approach shots and greens are tricky enough to keep lower handicappers interested.
One person who definitely enjoyed the day was Patrick Muñoz of Newport Beach. The golfer made his first career hole in one during the event. Muñoz got his ace on No. 8. He hit a five-iron from 165 yards.
His playing partners, Marc Forsythe, James Jackson and Matt Morsey, were all ribbing Muñoz during the day because he wasn’t playing well.
When the ball went airborne Muñoz had no idea his ball was going toward the cup.
“I had played terrible all day, and the guys were all over me because I hadn’t hit a tee shot airborne once before this shot,” said Muñoz, a member at Santa Ana Country Club for 15 years. “They were laughing after I finally hit one airborne, and we didn’t even know it went in the hole. I fixed my ball mark on the green, and there it was, in the cup. I thought it would be long. I never saw it go in.”
Unfortunately Muñoz didn’t get his ace on the 17th hole. The tournament was offering the lease of a new car on the signature hole for Newport Beach Country Club for anyone lucky enough to get an ace. The car went unclaimed.