The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Scottish Golf has new chairman

- STEVE SCOTT

Martin Gilbert, the recently retired chief executive of Scottish Open sponsor Aberdeen Standard Investment­s, is to be the new chairman of Scottish Golf, the governing body for the amateur game in Scotland.

The 65-year-old grew the company he funded as Aberdeen Asset Management in 1983 into one of the globe’s leading wealth management companies, but in the public eye has become synonymous with the company’s wide-ranging support of golf in Scotland at all levels.

Gilbert retired from the company this summer but has accepted a place on the board of the European Tour and has now agreed to succeed Eleanor Cannon at Scottish Golf ’s AGM in March.

“As many people know, golf has been a lifelong passion of mine and I’m hugely excited to be taking up this role,” he said.

“I commend Eleanor and her team for their sterling leadership of the new amalgamate­d body since its inception in 2015.

“The strategic direction that has been adopted by Scottish Golf is bold and exciting.

“I am very much looking forward to progressin­g that strategy and working closely with the board, the team and membership to develop the game at all levels.”

Cannon described Gilbert’s appointmen­t as “a tremendous coup for golf in Scotland”.

“Martin’s achievemen­ts in business globally and in his role as the biggest supporter of Scottish golf in the last two decades speak for themselves,” she said.

“I am sure his dynamic approach will allow Scottish Golf to flourish and I am extremely pleased that our members and our sport will benefit from Mar tin’s guidance and undoubted love for golf in the years ahead,”

The governing body has had a particular­ly difficult time during the pandemic with large cuts in service and personnel and widespread criticism from stakeholde­rs about Cannon’s leadership.

Chief executive Andrew McKinlay – the third to occupy the position during Cannon’s tenure – resigned in April amid claims Scotland’s golf clubs were refusing to pay subscripti­ons to the governing bodies and there was a revenue shortfall of £1 million.

Earlier that month the governing body scrapped its entire programme of events and performanc­e programmes for 2020.

Karin Sharp, the former chief operating officer, has been acting as chief executive for the last seven months.

Gilbert began his involvemen­t in golf by backing Paul Lawrie when his fellow Aberdonian was starting out as a profession­al, and with the success of that partnershi­p expanded to support many of Scotland’s best players, including Catriona Matthew, Colin Montgomeri­e, Marc Warren and more recently Robert MacIntyre.

Aberdeen Standard also was the main sponsor of the Scottish amateur golf national teams for many years. The company has also been the headline sponsor of the Scottish Open since 2012.

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 ??  ?? TOP MAN: Martin Gilbert, left, is the new chairman of Scottish Golf. Former chief executive Andrew McKinlay resigned from his post in
TOP MAN: Martin Gilbert, left, is the new chairman of Scottish Golf. Former chief executive Andrew McKinlay resigned from his post in
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April.

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