The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Golf needs to make LET a success: Steve Scott’s Tee to Green

- Steve Scott

Last week the Ladies European Tour unveiled their new schedule for 2021, the product of their fledgling associatio­n with the LPGA. There are 27 events, worth €19 million.

I wrote a column three years ago – obviously prepandemi­c and not in any recession era – after the LET simply lost six events in mid-season and seemed doomed.

Then, I didn’t see why golf in general should allow the LET to fail; it was a crucial element to the grassroots developmen­t of golf in Europe for half our population.

Thankfully Mike Whan, the commission­er of the LPGA, agreed and had the foresight to fight through the various obstacles to make the associatio­n happen.

The result is this robust schedule – doubling the number of events from 2017 – which should cement the future of women’s profession­al golf outside the stronghold­s of the USA and East Asia.

Whan is stepping down as LPGA commission­er and the hope is that his successor has the same foresight and commitment.

But there should be no shortage of operators in golf – in men’s golf particular­ly – who have the same instincts and motivation­s that he did.

One aspect of the new LET schedule that did disappoint was the loss of the Ladies Scottish Open’s major sponsor, Aberdeen Standard Investment­s.

ASI’S involvemen­t in the LSO was clearly driven by Martin Gilbert, their longtime chief executive.

Now he’s retired, they’re out, almost immediatel­y (they are still committed to

the men’s Scottish Open, as far as I am aware).

The championsh­ip is not in danger – there is still a co-sanctionin­g arrangemen­t, and the Scottish Government, in the guise of Visitscotl­and, remain committed. The championsh­ip is getting a venue split from the men’s Scottish this year, which is a good idea in my opinion.

But to me the women’s – or ladies if you must – Scottish Open needs and actually deserves far more support and input than the men’s does.

With the Rolex Series status, place in the schedule and prestige, the men’s has no issues that really need addressed.

It’s going to thrive no matter how long this

pandemic sits with us. More support does mean “affirmativ­e action” which sets a lot of golf people bristling.

But to me, and not just in golf, the opposition to giving women – or minorities – an extra advantage in the modern world has never made any reasonable sense.

If the world was or is really meritocrat­ic, there might be a point. But it isn’t, there’s still too much nepotism, sexism and racism. Patronage remains by far a more telling factor on achievemen­t than merit ever has.

We actually owe “affirmativ­e action” to people who have been unjustly ignored or bypassed for centuries.

Golf has treated women absolutely abysmally for the 250 years it’s been properly organised. It was only in 2014 that the most famous golf club in the world finally admitted women.

That’s a whole lot of catching up to do.

Golf remains an exceedingl­y rich sport, even in these days of pandemic losses

There’s plenty of money there to go into the women’s game, and some organisati­ons like the R&A are doing their best to change their own history by investing it.

Men’s golf is much more popular than the women’s game, but I’m not having the “market forces” argument either.

If you invest and promote something properly, you’ll create a demand. There’s a massive audience for women’s golf out there that remains largely untapped.

Hopefully, the new LET schedule will get the attention, promotion and further investment it deserves.

Rangefinde­rs don’t speed up play

The PGA of America last week announced they’d voted to allow rangefinde­rs at the majors they control – the PGA Championsh­ip, the KPMG Women’s PGA and Senior PGA.

This has produced the usual battle lines drawn among traditiona­lists and progressiv­es.

I’m no traditiona­list but I know for sure that one of the reasons for the change – it will speed up play – is completely bogus.

The idea is that players and caddies will no longer need to consult yardage books utterly ignores the fact that these books are annotated with much more necessary informatio­n than simple distance to the flag.

(And I’m not solely referring to motivation­al slogans like “Do. Or do not. There is no try.”

This was in Jordan Spieth’s yardage book during his major run and is of course quoting… Yoda from Star Wars.).

And anyway, they won’t bin the books anyway.

What you’ll have instead is players unzipping their rangefinde­r from the tasteful leatherett­e bag, checking the yardage, replacing it in the bag and zipping it back up.

And then whipping the yardage book out of the hip pocket and leafing through it. You know, just to be absolutely sure.

This was the exact scenario I saw in PGA events in the UK when they allowed rangefinde­rs. They didn’t speed up play, they actually slowed it.

A more extreme example I recall from the Scottish Boys some years back when the SGU finally allowed rangefinde­rs.

Young lad drives 30 yards right into the bundai. A hack doesn’t move it. Another hack moves it about five yards. Fourth shot is a complete whiff.

Fifth shot he finally made solid contact and it squirts back on to the fairway. Opponent is by this time safely on in two.

Standing over his sixth, the young lad heaved a sigh. And then pulled out his rangefinde­r…

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 ??  ?? TOUR BOOST: Team Europe’s victory at the Solheim Cup 2019 showed there was a real audience for the LET.
TOUR BOOST: Team Europe’s victory at the Solheim Cup 2019 showed there was a real audience for the LET.

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