The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

A rough time for golf clubs

Scotland may be the ‘home of golf’, yet that is not stopping the sport from losing golf club members at a worrying rate. Michael Alexander reports

- Malexander@thecourier.co.uk

With the Scottish Open last week, the Open at Carnoustie this week and the Senior Open at St Andrews next week, the eyes of the golfing world are on Scotland with significan­t boosts expected for the economy.

But does the buzz surroundin­g these high profile internatio­nal events mask a more fundamenta­l problem facing Scottish golf clubs amid recent reports of dwindling membership­s and some clubs struggling to survive?

Recent figures from KPMG certainly suggest so.

According to the Golf Participat­ion Report for Europe 2017 published last autumn, the number of registered golfers in Scotland fell by more than 6,000 from 2015 to 2016 with the home of golf losing more golfers than any other country in Europe.

Statistics showed there were 192,533 registered golfers in Scotland in 2016, a fall of 6,711 (3.37%) from the 199,244 recorded a year earlier. In comparison to other European countries, only the Czech Republic – a fall of 2,034 – lost more than 2,000 golfers.

Scotland also lost 19 courses during the same period – the most of any European country. The home of golf now has 578 courses, with an average of 333 registered golfers per course.

The impact of Scotland’s drink-drive laws, pressure on people’s time and a ‘stuffy’ image problem have all been blamed for the challenges facing the game.

Dalhousie Golf Club captain Donald Ford, 73, says membership­s at the Carnoustie club – currently celebratin­g its 150th anniversar­y – are holding up well. The former profession­al footballer puts the club’s fortunate financial circumstan­ces down to the club no longer having its own clubhouse or staff – instead operating out of Carnoustie Golf Hotel.

However, he says there are a number of issues that clubs in general need to tackle if they are to survive.

A priority, he says, is attracting – and retaining – more youngsters. He says the work PGA profession­al Keir McNicoll is doing with juniors at Carnoustie Golf Links is a shining example of what can be done.

However, he believes many golf club committees need to “work harder” to engage with their communitie­s and schools in the face of so many other leisure opportunit­ies open to young people nowadays – including computer games.

Other challenges facing clubs, he says, include a general lack of money for long-term investment; the tightening up of drink-drive laws and their impact on golfers socialisin­g after games; more men putting their families first at weekends than in decades gone by (something which he adds is a good thing!) and financial constraint­s meaning more club work is done by volunteers rather than paid staff.

Ian Cook, 55, clubhouse manager at Ballumbie Castle Golf Course on the outskirts of Dundee, took over the clubhouse franchise in April.

Quashing speculatio­n that the 18-hole club was about to sell off holes for housing and scale back to a ninehole course, he said the club , with its 350 members – including 35 juniors – was in a “good place”. However, he said the drink-drive laws did have a massive impact on many clubs. Ballumbie was “very lucky”, he said, because it has a public house licence with non-golfers accounting for around 50% of its trade.

“When the drink-drive laws came in I was running the catering at Carnoustie Golf Club, and in the first six months there was a £25,000 drop in turnover,”

It’s costing more to get a higher standard of facility which fewer people are coming to enjoy

said the former Anglers Inn, Guildtown, co-owner. “People would drive home and go to their ‘local’ after a game of golf instead of hanging about the club. So it wasn’t just affecting the bar, it was also affecting the kitchen.

“We are lucky we get a lot of nongolfers coming into the bar here. I think that kind of diversific­ation is the way forward.”

At Cupar, which boasts the world’s oldest nine-hole golf club, captain Hugh Ironside, 52, is hopeful that the recent appointmen­t of a new clubhouse/bar franchisee Craig Trewern will encourage more golfers – and nongolfers – to the club, and attract more visitors.

However, with 200 playing members, and despite very good recruitmen­t, the club has a high annual turnover and the challenge from increasing numbers of so-called “nomadic” golfers who float between clubs depending on the best deals.

A key for the future, says Hugh, will be trying to make the clubhouse more of a community facility.

“The three reasons membership­s are declining are elderly members getting too old and dying off, junior members coming and going as their peer group fluctuates, and in this area, access to the St Andrews Links tickets giving relatively cheap access to seven St Andrews courses taking away a lot of the serious golfers,” said Hugh.

“I think the golfer nowadays expects higher quality courses – but that has an impact on cost, machinery and labour which goes up all the time.

“It’s costing more to get a higher standard of facility which fewer people are coming to enjoy.”

The Golf Foundation – a charity which supports Scottish Golf – will be announcing 87 projects aimed at young golfers during an event at Monifieth Golf Club tomorrow.

 ?? Picture: Kim Cessford. ?? Ian Cook, clubhouse manager at Ballumbie Castle Golf Course on the outskirts of Dundee.
Picture: Kim Cessford. Ian Cook, clubhouse manager at Ballumbie Castle Golf Course on the outskirts of Dundee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom