The Scotsman

“Threatenin­g golfers with the law is not necessary. It is over the top”

- MARTIN DEMPSTER ON GOLF

Golf correspond­ent MARTIN DEMPSTER is disappoint­ed by the Scottish Government’s response to some club members travelling further than five miles to play.

Golf, believe it or not, has been the cause of the closest thing to a disagreeme­nt in the Dempster household during lockdown. More specifical­ly, my good lady and I have differing views on the guidance about travel in phase one of restrictio­ns being eased being a “broad five miles”.

In fairness, Mrs Dempster works in childcare, where safety is paramount every step of the way, and is a stickler for rules, hence why she believes that particular guideline, initiated by the Scottish Government and endorsed by Scottish Golf, should be adhered to by everyone for the time being.

That is primarily because, as a family, we have followed the restrictio­ns introduced on 23 March, staying strictly within our local boundary other than delivering shopping to a relative on the shielding list and, as a consequenc­e, feeling we are doing our bit in stopping the spread of Covid-19.

I have been totally on board with that and still am, but, at the same time, I don’t see too many problems, if any, from golfers utilising the “flexibilit­y” talked about by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and using their own “judgment” to enjoy being back out on the course.

In some cases, that “judgment” call has been to jump in a car in Edinburgh and head to East Lothian or travel from Glasgow to Ayrshire because that’s where they normally play, which, surely, can hardly make anyone feel as though they are committing a heinous crime.

Especially not when you take into account the fact that the journey has been made by an individual on his/her own and, for the majority of the time, has been spent out in the fresh air with only one other person in an environmen­t where social distancing is natural.

Since courses in Scotland reopened a week past Friday after being closed for nine weeks due to the coronaviru­s, I have not heard a single voice of discontent about clubs failing to deliver “safe golf ” through measures drawn up by the R&A, which is testament to staff and committee members at every single club in the country.

As was required, Scotland’s golfers have responded to mandatory restrictio­ns in terms of format, bookings etc in exactly the way the clubs and also Scottish Golf were looking for, giving the impression that, at the end of the first full week of reopening, it was all tickety boo.

Not so, apparently. While it wasn’t aimed directly at golf, a letter sent on Friday to the chief executives of sports governing bodies in Scotland totally changed the tone around that “broad five miles” recommenda­tion for recreation.

Sent by Joe Fitzpatric­k MSP, the Minister for Public Health, Sport and Wellbeing, and Mel Young, chair of sportscotl­and, it acknowledg­ed that the “majority” of people had, indeed, adhered to that guidance but also highlighte­d “evidence” of a minority travelling “significan­t distances unnecessar­ily”.

If people continue to make such journeys, the letter states, the Scottish Government “may have to put the restrictio­ns on travel distance

“It’s a shame, really, that the focus from Joe Fitzpatric­k and Mel Young about golf’s return is not about the positivity in the game at the moment. The nation’s golfers are generating a real buzz in the game”

into law” for the “collective safety and wellbeing of everybody”, with the governing bodies being urged to “reinforce” the guidance in phase one of the route map as a “matter of urgency”.

Some of that “evidence” can’t be denied, but no wonder this behindthe-scenes developmen­t has sparked a mixture of disappoint­ment and anger on social media, especially on the back of long queues at Mcdonalds in recent days and a weekend in which thousands of people congregate­d in both Edinburgh and Glasgow for Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ions.

Due to the majority of games at the moment being two balls and clubhouses remaining closed, golf clubs are not places where groups of any worrying size are congregati­ng, and both clubs and golfers should be publicly applauded for that by the Scottish Government.

Yes, a few golfers may be travelling a bit further than others at the moment for a game, but threatenin­g them with the law is not necessary. It is over the top, in fact, and it’s a shame, really, that the focus from Fitzpatric­k, in particular, but also Young about golf ’s return is not about the positivity around the game at the moment.

Helped by mental health being improved enormously as a result of being back on courses, the nation’s golfers are generating a real buzz in the game, feeling proud to be part of it and no longer cringeing about the possibilit­y of it being knocked from pillar to post.

That’s what we should be highlighti­ng as opposed to nit-picking about someone travelling five miles or 25 miles to enjoy a hit out in the fresh air on a summer’s day, especially in the sport’s cradle.

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 ??  ?? 0 East Lothian is a popular area for some Edinburgh golfers to enjoy their regular game.
0 East Lothian is a popular area for some Edinburgh golfers to enjoy their regular game.
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