The fifth annual Sowing Seeds for Life Golf Tournament for Charity is now in the books, and with an impressive list of celebrities and a record 110 golfers taking part, it was the most successful one of the five.
Prior to play on Oct. 7 at Glendora Country Club, Dodgers Steve Garvey, Ron Cey, Bill Russell and Al Downing greeted the golfers, signed autographs and posed for pictures.
And how fitting it was to have three members of the legendary Dodger infield of the 1970s and early ’80s -- Garvey, Russell and Cey – taking part on the same day that the current Dodgers would later advance to the National League Championship Series by defeating the Atlanta Braves, 4-3.
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Davey Lopes, the other member of that infield, was unavailable because he is a coach for the Dodgers.
Garvey was originally planning to play in the tournament but had to leave for that evening’s game because he was part of a pregame ceremony also involving former Dodgers Eric Karros and Steve Yeager. Cey also had to be at the game because he works for the Dodgers in community relations, but he was not going to play anyway because he is not a golfer.
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The evening program at the SSFL tournament featured a live auction with Glendora resident Chris Roberts, the radio voice of UCLA football and basketball, and a sports panel roundtable moderated by Bill Dwyre of San Dimas, the former sports editor of the Los Angeles Times who is now a columnist for that newspaper.
The panel consisted of Russell, Downing, former UCLA quarterback and current radio commentator Matt Stevens, and retired Hall of Fame jockey Laffit Pincay.
Such a panel has become a trademark of the SSFL tournament and has featured such sports legends as Jerry West, James Worthy, Jim Harrick, Trevor Denman, Laker assistant coach Frank Hamblen and many more in the past. However last year, Roy Firestone entertained and Hall of Fame announcer Bob Miller of the Los Angeles Kings announcer was the featured guest.
This year former UCLA football coach Terry Donahue had originally agreed to be on the panel but had to drop out because of a business obligation. But he did take tournament co-chairmen Tim Grant and Al Snow to lunch near his home in Newport Beach on Oct. 2. Grant, a 1982 graduate of UCLA, was the tournament honoree this year.
The privilege of playing in a foursome with either Garvey or Russell was auctioned off prior to the tournament. Dane Johnson, an associate pastor at the Christ Church of the Valley in San Dimas, and San Dimas businessman Leo Wills had the winning bids.
Since Garvey was unable to play on Oct. 7, he arranged for Johnson and two friends to play with him at his club, the Indian Wells Country Club, in January.
Other sports celebrities who did play in the tournament included former USC and Buffalo Bills cornerback Chris Hale and former Long Beach State basketball star Ed Ratleff, a two-time All-American who played for the Houston Rockets for six seasons.
James Washington, former UCLA, Los Angeles Ram and Dallas Cowboy safety, attended the dinner. Washington has his own foundation, Shelter 37 (so named because 37 was his football jersey number). That foundation, like SSFL, serves the needy in variety of ways.
The live auction was highlighted by the auctioning off a Dodger package that includes a visit with Vin Scully in his broadcast booth t Dodger Stadium, a visit to the Fox studios and the set of that network’s NFL pregame show and a visit to horse racing announcer Trevor Denman’s booth at Santa Anita.
But of course the highlight of the day was the presence of Garvey, Russell and Cey. The infield of Garvey, Lopes, Russell and Cey were together from June 23, 1973 until 1981, when the season ended with the Dodgers beating the New York Yankees in Game 6 of the World Series. Cey shared World Series MVP honors with teammates Steve Yeager and Pedro Guerrero.
During their years together, Garvey, Lopes, Russell and Cey were responsible for four pennants, one title, 21 All-Star appearances, five Gold Gloves, a National League MVP, an NL Championship Series MVP and that share of the 1981 World Series MVP.
Sowing Seeds for Life, is a 501 © (3) non-profit that directly provides food, water, personal-car items and social services to some 6,000 needy people per month in the East San Gabriel Valley.
The driving force behind the charity and the tournament is Vicki Brown of Glendora, who besides being the founder and CEO of Sowing Seeds for Life is also the CEO of DPI Labs, a prominent La Verne aerospace manufacturing company. Vicki literally planted the seeds that grew the charity and the tournament. Sowing Seeds for Life started out as a backyard garden project. “I’m just proud to be the one who watches all this happen,” she says modestly.
The cost of playing in this tournament, enjoying a steak dinner with table service and listening to a fascinating sports roundtable discussion was only $200 per player or $750 per foursome.
It’s a pretty safe assumption to say everyone got their money’s worth.
