The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Junior Masters event in memory of Barrie

- courier golf reporter twitter: @c–sscoTT stscott@thecourier.co.uk

One of the most popular figures across Scottish amateur golf is to be honoured with an event bearing his name to raise valuable funds for junior golf in this country.

The inaugural “Barrie Douglas Scottish Junior Masters” will be staged over Blairgowri­e’s Lansdowne Course this year in a fitting tribute for the Perthshire native.

Barrie, one of the game’s great characters and a guiding hand to the career of many young players including European Tour card holders Bradley Neil and Connor Syme, passed away last August while on duty as Scotland captain at the European Boys’ Team Championsh­ip in Spain.

His sudden death aged only 69 left many in the game deeply saddened and quickly saw the formation of the Barrie Douglas Foundation in his honour to help up-and-coming young players.

A huge supporter of Scottish Golf activities, Barrie performed various selection and captaincy roles and was also a GB&I selector for the R&A from 2009 to 2016.

Now the Scottish Junior Masters has been added to this season’s calendar, a 54-hole (no cut) World Amateur Golf Ranking event for Under-16 and Under-18 boys that will be played at Blairgowri­e from April 27-29.

Entries are now open for the competitio­n and more informatio­n is available by logging on to scottishgo­lf.org/ championsh­ips

Am I missing something? Barely two weeks on from one of the most egregious examples of slow play in profession­al golf history, they’re actually getting worse.

We have still barely recovered from JB Holmes’ four-minutes-plus address of a shot at Torrey Pines before he decided to not even attempt to win the tournament.

Even worse was Justin Thomas coming out immediatel­y to say he “had JB’s back” about the incident instead of getting on it, like every player, administra­tor, fan and media should have.

Yet on Sunday at the Genesis (LA) Open at Riviera, at the conclusion of what was a roundly splendid golf tournament, we were left spitting fury at Patrick Cantlay and (surprise!) Kevin Na taking extraordin­ary lengths of time over the most routine shots. Na took a minute and a half to finish a tap-in at one point.

It’s almost as if it’s now open defiance of golf’s etiquette and the stated rules of the PGA Tour, with the compliance of the Tour hierarchy and referees.

Holmes still has had no apparent sanction for Torrey Pines, even with the Tour’s more open policy on discipline.

And once again we have the excuse of “we’re playing for millions” trotted out.

First of all, it shows the money obsession of today’s pros. It should be noted that Na (I hate to pick on him continuall­y, but it’s unavoidabl­e) has now accumulate­d $25 million in his career with one solitary win.

Secondly, who do they think is actually paying for all this? Sponsors, fans, TV stations who get no entertainm­ent value out of 15 successive waggles and looks before a player can commit to actually striking the ball.

Continue to alienate them, guys, and you’ll soon see the money drop.

And thirdly, they’re already playing like glaciers advancing over eons by the time they get to the pros, because they learn it in college (when playing for nothing) from coaches who have got players basically “thinking about thinking” as one swing coach memorably said.

The USGA are asleep at the wheel here, concentrat­ing on the club game like it’s the cause and not a symptom of this disease.

The NCAA is the seeding ground for these slowies.

And there’s also the apparent belief in golf that you must do anything but offend the leading elite players. I notice that the furore on Twitter has been led mostly by European commentato­rs, journalist­s, players and fans. There’s barely a peep from the US.

The R&A are at least trying to get to the grassroots of the problem, advocating wherever possible ‘Ready to Play’ – the rather obvious requiremen­t of being ready to hit after your opponent does, instead of staring at the cloud formations and then going through your entire preparatio­n, caddie discussion and interminab­le pre-shot routine.

But while it’s great that Ready To Play is in all R&A amateur tournament­s now, they won’t impose it in the Open.

They don’t think pace of play is an issue there (outside of St Andrews, for logistical reasons), and at Birkdale it wasn’t.

But that’s beside the point. What is stopping them imposing it there? Why can’t we have a consistent campaign across the game here and on the European Tour to speed up players? The Open is the shop window of the internatio­nal game and the perfect place to make a firm example.

Of course, docking shots under the present rules would be the best way possible to gain these selfish, effectivel­y cheating players’ attention. But nobody has the will to do that it seems.

Credit to Sunday’s winner Bubba Watson, by the way, who is not everyone’s cup of tea but I’ll take his occasional attitude if, as a pretty rapid player, he wins ahead of the likes of Cantlay and Na.

A fitting tribute to Barrie

I’ve mentioned before how much we in Scottish golf miss Barrie Douglas, the long-time Scottish Boys team captain and administra­tor who died suddenly last summer.

There is already a foundation in his name to help junior golfers. And now Scottish Golf has organised the Barrie Douglas Scottish Junior Masters to be held at his beloved Blairgowri­e Golf Club at the end of April.

This is a fitting tribute to a man who was such an enthusiast­ic and widely-admired figure in the game. Based loosely on the Sir Henry Cooper event in England, it’s the brainchild of Scottish Junior coach Spencer Henderson, Barrie’s closest colleague at so many junior events down the years.

“We went to so many events together down the years so I knew what Barrie liked, and we’ve taken inspiratio­n from the Sir Henry Cooper event,” explained Spencer.

“There is a real feel to that event, family friendly as well, and we’re going to try and do the same at Blairgowri­e.

“The event is WAGR-ranked and will hopefully attract players, with the event also being on the Scottish Golf Boys’ Order of Merit.

“I’m just delighted we have managed to build a tournament in Barrie’s honour.”

The hope is to expand the event in future years to encompass girls and more age groups.

The Open is the shop window of the internatio­nal game and the perfect place to make a firm example

 ??  ?? Barrie Douglas was a hugely popular figure in golf.
Barrie Douglas was a hugely popular figure in golf.
 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Bubba Watson is speechless at winning the Genesis Open, not at the ludicrous pace of play of his rivals.
Picture: Getty. Bubba Watson is speechless at winning the Genesis Open, not at the ludicrous pace of play of his rivals.
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