Khaleej Times

Facing no-shows, golf looks to emerging market growth

- Tiger Woods’ absence from major tournament­s has dealt a big blow to the sport as revenues have dropped drasticall­y. —

london _ Golf ’s return to the Olympics after 112 years may not be as triumphant as many in the sport hoped.

The top four players in the men’s game — Jason Day, Dustin Johnson, Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy — have controvers­ially opted to skip the competitio­n.

Three of them cited fears of Zika, the mosquito-borne virus spreading rapidly in the Americas, while Spieth blamed more general health concerns.

Some critics, including the great Gary Player who is South Africa’s Olympic captain, have suggested the absence of the top four and several others may have more to do with the lack of prize money in the Games event.

The no-shows represent another blow to the business of golf that has suffered since the global economic downturn and from the nosedive in form and injury struggles of 14-times major winner Tiger Woods.

The sport is struggling to grow as youngsters gravitate towards other pastimes such as soccer, with sales of golf apparel and equipment having fallen for several years.

The US ‘golf economy’ declined 9.4 percent from $75.6 billion to $68.8 billion from 2005 to 2011, according to a report prepared by research institute SRI Internatio­nal.

Flagging sales have led companies such as Adidas AG to scale back golf investment­s.

Adidas said in May it would jettison its golf equipment brands including TaylorMade, Adams and Ashworth. The company toiled in its bid to sell these brands, Reuters has previously reported.

A global event like the Olympics might have been expected to give the industry a much-needed boost.

Many in the sport have fought tooth and nail for decades to mobilise a worldwide effort to get golf back into the Games, Player said in April.

“Players today make so much (money) and should be giving back,” he added.

Many of the top golfers who dropped out are in contention to win the FedExCup Series that pays out $10 million to the season-long champion of the US PGA Tour.

A US champion in Rio, by contrast, can expect to receive $25,000 from the national Olympic Committee. Other national organisati­ons are offering similar token bonuses.

The absence of top golfers could, however, present an opening for lesser-known players to capture internatio­nal attention for themselves, their countries and sponsors.

“Emerging markets for golf, such as China, southeast Asia, central Europe and South America, have just begun to realise their potential,” said Tom Stine, a partner at market research firm Golf Datatech.

If nothing else the sport will now have a bigger presence in the Olympic host country of Brazil, said Andrea Sartori, global head of sport for the profession­al service company KPMG.

The nation has 123 golf courses, less than half of the 319 layouts in Argentina, a much smaller country, according to a 2015 report by the the R&A, organisers of the British Open.

The US, by comparisio­n, has 15,373 courses.

The Olympic golf course, built from scratch in the Barra da Tijuca district, will become a public facility following the Olympics. —

 ?? AP file ??
AP file

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