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Swashbuckling Dirtadian Slowed A Bit By Surgeries

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  • Swashbuckling Dirtadian Slowed A Bit By Surgeries

    SWASHBUCKLING DIRTADIAN SLOWED A BIT BY SURGERIES
    Bryan Lee

    Tucson Citizen
    http://www.tucsoncitizen.com/daily/sports/ 92425.php
    July 31 2008
    AZ

    Nobody said growing old gracefully would be so hard, but Armen
    Dirtadian refuses to let right shoulder surgery keep him from
    performing on the golf course and the stage.

    "He shot (1-over-par) 37 on the front side of TCC (Tucson Country
    Club) last week from the back tees," says PGA Champions Tour player
    and good friend Ronnie Black.

    The 55-year-old Dirtadian, a 10-time winner of the Pima County Amateur
    and one of Tucson's top actors, has been reduced to sword fighting
    with his left arm as his Robin Hood character.

    "Physical therapy . . . twice a week . . . it puts me through the
    wringer," Dirtadian said. "I've never gone through anything like
    this. I've always physically been doing something. Now, all of a
    sudden I get up some mornings and I can't move."

    But Dirtadian plans to take no time off under the bright lights.

    "I'll be doing theater from August through March," including the
    Gaslight Theatre in January, he firmly says.

    He hopes his golf game might just be there in full swing before this
    year's rye is seeded, although he had to miss this year's Arizona
    Amateur in Scottsdale.

    Dirtadian, also a four-time winner of the City Amateur, underwent
    right shoulder replacement in February. Last December he had spinal
    fusion discectomy a few months after he made the cut for match play
    in the 2007 Arizona Amateur.

    He tried to play in February and was overcome with pain. The shoulder
    replacement came after he realized it was "totally gone from arthritis,
    no cartilage left."

    To save time and a long, painful wait, he had the February surgery done
    by outpatient procedure with just a local anesthetic shot in the neck.

    "They cut a ball of humerus (arm bone) off and put a notch in the
    humerus," he said, "then a titanium shaft down (along the upper arm)
    and they put a cobalt steel ball cutting through the muscle (in the
    socket) and stitched me up.

    "I was in at 9:30 and out at noon."

    He can't play pain free, yet he's optimistic that with hard work,
    maybe by January he can be as good as new.

    Meanwhile, he can hit it fairly straight from the front tees. Never
    a long hitter - "I'm not a fast-twitch guy - his game has always been
    precision and "smart shots" onto the green.

    He is one of two Tucsonans to break 60 for 18 holes. His 59 at the
    old Randolph South Golf Course was the city record until the late
    Willie Kane shot a 58 on the same course in 1991.

    Black's recent Champions Tour success gives him hope. He hits balls
    with Black when the pro is home, driving the cart around, talking and
    "just watching him."

    "And he has been a big help with my own short game," Dirtadian
    said. "He hits shots I never have even thought of hitting."

    For all of Dirtadian's handsome, 6-foot-3 presence, his savoir-faire
    and power as an actor and singer and his golf aplomb, he has always
    been just a local boy trying to make good.

    He had dreams of playing on the pro golf tour but got a lesson in
    humility in the late 1970s at a tour of champions national amateur
    tournament. He had beaten Tucson's Dr. Ed Updegraff in the Arizona
    Stroke Play, coming from behind with a pair of birdies.

    "I was 17th of 63 guys at that tournament, these guys were so good,"
    he recalled. I thought, 'I don't know . .' If you can't be dominant
    in your own backyard, I mean winning everything, going pro isn't
    the thing."

    Born Nov. 11, 1952, Armen - his first name comes from Armistice Day
    and his Armenian ancestry - was the eldest of three in a tight-knit
    family with a demanding father; a musical heritage - jazz and classical
    were OK, rock 'n' roll was banned; and, of course, golf. His father,
    Henry, made him a cut-down driver as a tyke and he caddied for him
    and chased butterflies.

    He played four years at Palo Verde High School and walked on at
    the University of Arizona but quickly earned a scholarship. Among
    his teammates were current Champions Tour members Don Pooley and Dan
    Pohl. A speech major, he sang solo in his church, played the piano and
    early during his 27-year career as a Tucson Unified School District
    teacher began acting at Salpointe Catholic's Poor Man's Theater
    in 1977.

    His started with the role of Tevye in "Fiddler on the Roof," still his
    favorite. He has been a noted leading man, performing as Pharaoh in
    "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat," Charlie Anderson in
    "Shenandoah," "Zerro" in a "Zorro" spoof, Count Dracula, a Tombstone
    marshal, Sinbad the Sailor, the Prince in "The Unsinkable Molly Brown"
    and the phantom in "Phantom of the Opera." He had lead roles in
    "Les Miserables," "Showboat" and "The Sheik."

    For 18 straight years, he was Peter in the passion play "Simon
    Peter." In his early 20s, he joined late local jazz musician Mickey
    Greco to record a CD.

    He taught theater and coached at Catalina High and spent the last
    eight years of his tenure before retiring by working with young
    thespians at Secrist Middle School.

    His busy athletic schedule may have contributed to his shoulder
    problems.

    He pitched as a youth and had a mean slider (luckily, his father
    forbade a curveball or his golf days might be over). He played
    racquetball, and spent time at the golf range as much as he could.

    "I worked pretty hard at the game," he says. "I think sometimes
    hardest is not the way to go. I had to learn the hard way."

    His health problems have been emotional for Dirtadian and wife, Nancy,
    to deal with, but he doesn't want people feeling sorry for him.

    "Things were going my way too fast. Nature caught up," he said. "But
    there have been so many people who have been here for me I didn't
    even know were my friends. This situation has been almost like a gift.

    "My life has been a great life. These injuries make you appreciate
    it more. Lots of times you take things for granted. I'm playing the
    game I love, I'm with the people I love. . . . It's great to be alive."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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