The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Amateur game key to closing gender pay gap in pro golf — R&A

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CARNOUSTIE, Scotland: While gender equality is clearly prevalent in tennis, Novak Djokovic and Angelique Kerber both scooped US$2.94 million for winning Wimbledon last weekend, the world of golf has a long way to go to catch up.

Total prize money at this week’s British Open is US$10.5 million but the purse for the women’s equivalent next month is only US$3.25 million.

The R&A, who run the sport worldwide along with the United States Golf Associatio­n, said the way to address the imbalance was to focus on the amateur game.

“Our primary objective is to make sure our game is thriving 50 years from now,” chief executive Martin Slumbers told reporters at Carnoustie.

“The growth of women playing golf, women working in golf, and families playing golf, is critical to the long-term growth of the amateur game.

“If I just look at the UK, the most frightenin­g statistic I’ve seen is that between 2016 and 2017 the average age of (club) membership went from 54 to 58 years of age,” said Slumbers.

“That is a significan­t problem we have to face so our Women in Golf Charter is one of our major planks of trying to get the amateur game to grow,” said Slumbers.

“We absolutely want to drive up the prize money for the Women’s British Open...but if we can grow the women’s amateur game, that helps the business model at the top end. That’s what we are trying to achieve.”

One of the chief aims of the charter is to develop a more inclusive culture in golf and to allow more women and girls to maximise their potential. Slumbers, however, underlined that finance was a key factor in all considerat­ions.

“Profession­al golf is a business, a business about how much revenue comes in from TV, from sponsors, and then you balance that against how much it costs to stage the event and how much you pay out in prize money,” he said.

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