USA TODAY US Edition

Golf powers should listen to top amateurs

- Christine Brennan

AUGUSTA, Ga. – For the second time in three years, Augusta National Golf Club elevated the profile of women’s amateur golf Saturday, doing its best to show a stodgy and often misogynist­ic sport what its future looks like, if it truly cares to notice.

By again flinging open its doors for the Augusta National Women’s Amateur nine years after it allowed women to become members, this storied club did more than showcase the game’s finest young talent. That certainly would have been enough, but unwittingl­y, it did more: It provided a significan­t platform for the social media opinions of several of these women on a range of subjects important to them and their peers, including Black Lives Matter, social justice and voting rights.

It has to be the first time Augusta National has ever hosted social activists of any kind and it certainly provides a stark contrast with what is likely coming Masters week as the eyes of the sports world turn to the very significan­t political and social issues percolatin­g here in Georgia – and the predictabl­e blank stares and no comments of the predominat­ely white, rich, very conservati­ve male golfers who will be playing here.

On June 1, 2020, just after the death of George Floyd, University of Southern California’s Alexa Melton wrote on Twitter: “I am not black, but I see you. I am not black, but I hear you. I am not black, but I will fight for you. For what is right. For what you deserve.”

I read her tweet back to her Saturday afternoon not far from the 18th green, after she finished tied for 28th.

“I actually just wrote a paper on this, where athletes, they have a platform, and where they should actually use their platform to speak out on the changes that are happening,” she said. “And to just stand for what’s right.”

She said that while she has focused exclusivel­y on golf the past few days, issues such as racial injustice remain vital. “I can definitely use my platform to advocate for them and just put more eyes and more focus on them.”

When asked about their forthright social media comments, several other golfers offered muted replies, understand­ably so. It’s not always easy speaking up on a stage such as this, where these young players are considered guests of the club and find themselves continuall­y expressing their gratitude for the opportunit­y to play such a revered course.

Duke’s Erica Shepherd is aware of the issues in Georgia. “It’s absolutely important to me, it always is,” said Shepherd, who tied for 16th Saturday. “But when you’re competing tournament week, I try to stay off of social media, stay kind of out of the outside world stuff, and just keep my head down. I’ll look at that after this tournament.”

Vanderbilt’s Auston Kim wrote extensivel­y about the presidenti­al election on Twitter, including attaching this tweet to a photo of her placing her ballot into a drop box. “Civic duty fulfilled. Free and fair elections are the foundation to a democracy. Representa­tives must be held accountabl­e in our democratic republic, especially now. Every vote ought to be counted. If not, our future looks even bleaker. #VOTE”

In another tweet, she said that active voter suppressio­n, “the quest to delegitimi­ze the fair casting of votes” and “declaring a premature win based on incomplete and spun informatio­n” are “an embarrassm­ent to our country.”

After finishing tied for 25th, she was asked about what was going on right here, in Georgia.

“The state of Georgia has the right to make its own decisions,” she said. “And I have thoughts on it but they can do whatever they’d like, and that’s all I’m going to say about that.”

Then again, her social media posts have already spoken volumes. So have the tweets of her fellow competitor­s. The powers that be in golf should listen to their every word.

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