The Scotsman

Support is growing for Scottish Golf ’s plight to be re-assessed

● Women’s counties call to hold special meeting after ‘no’ vote gains momentum

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in its infancy (the amalgamate­d body was set up in October 2016) to take the game forward is a big mistake.

“We have to give them that opportunit­y. If not, they will be running about headless chickens as staff cuts are made. It will be back to two or three people in a backroom. That will be stepping back 20 years and Scottish Golf will diminish in everyone’s eyes, so I am keen to see us do something by putting options on the table.”

Concurring, Craigmilla­r Park’s John Hall said: “I thought the decision was incredibly selfish as this is about golf in 40 or 50 years’ time. It is not about your pint next week. But I have three words for Scottish Golf – communicat­ion, communicat­ion, communicat­ion. That’s the fundamenta­l issue. They have got to communicat­e to people at the grassroots and explain what they are trying to do.”

Representi­ng Kingsknowe, Willie Stephen claimed that club members are “split” on an issue that has left Scottish Golf facing cuts of up to £450,000 over the next 18 months from a budget that has already been slashed by £700,000 due to sportscotl­and funding having been drasticall­y cut. “A lot of members don’t see the purpose of increasing the affiliatio­n fee as they don’t get any benefit while there are others who are keen to help develop and push golf,” he added.

Denys Flaherty, a former Lothians president, said it had been a “rocky start” for Scottish Golf as a unified body due to first Hamish Grey then Blane Dodds quitting as chief executive. “In two years, nothing appears to have been done to move Scottish Golf forward and a strategy on the table at the end of last year (including the affiliatio­n fee going up to £24) was overwhelmi­ngly rejected,” he remarked. “We need things to be clearly defined, including the role of the Areas and Counties.”

According to Gibson, the issue has even left the Lothians Golf Associatio­n divided and he received support from delegates to get a straight “yes” or “no” from clubs about backing the call for a special general meeting. “The Lothians executive committee is very much split,” he said. “I am for doing something and I think it’s better to be ‘on the inside’. But we have to be guided by what our clubs want. We have to try to move this forward in some meaningful way and I think the best way to do that is on a geographic­al basis with everyone working together.”

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