Justin Thomas shoots 63, trails Brian Harman by 1 at US Open
Justin Thomas landed a 3-wood on the 18th green where some players couldn’t land a wedge, leaving him an 8-foot eagle putt that he calmly made for a 9-under 63 that matched one U.S. Open record and broke another.
It also put him squarely in the mix to capture his first major.
On an Erin Hills course that again lacked enough wind to be the stern test that the U.S. Open wants, Brian Harman weaved his way through traffic at the top of the leaderboard Saturday for a 5-under 67 and a one-shot lead over Thomas, Brooks Koepka and Tommy Fleetwood.
Thomas became the fifth player to shoot 63 in a U.S. Open and the first player at 9 under. And if his hot pink pants were not enough, he did it in style. He had 310 yards to the hole when he hit 3-wood that could have led to big trouble if he went too far long or left.
“Oh gosh, Jimmy, be good,” he said to caddie Jimmy Johnson when the ball was in the air, and it was close to perfect. The ball landed on the front of the green just soft enough that it rolled out 8 feet by the hole.
Thomas poured that in to become the 29th player with a 63 in a major championship.
“The finish was awesome. I’d love to have another one of those,” said Thomas, who posted at 11-under 205.
The way this U.S. Open is going at Erin Hills, he might need it.
Only six players had ever reached 10-under par or lower in the previous 116 U.S. Opens. There are five players in double digits at Erin Hills.
Harman was at 12-under 204.
Brian Harman needs a par at the 18th to secure the overnight lead alone at the U.S. Open. pic.twitter.com/PaYrlMFtCP
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) June 17, 2017
Koepka also reached the green in two on the 667-yard closing hole for a two-putt birdie and a 68. Fleetwood was poised to take the lead until his pitch to the 18th wasn’t strong enough and his next shot went beyond the flag and down the slope some 70 feet away. He got that up-and-down for a bogey and a 68.
Rickie Fowler, sharing a house with Thomas this week, was being left behind until he ran off three straight birdies and shot 68. He was 10 under.
Not to be overlooked was Si Woo Kim, who captured The Players Championship last month. He shot 68 and was only three back.
Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., slid down the leaderboard. He shot a 3-over 75 and is 1 under for the tournament.
Even with the course drying out, there simply was not enough wind to frighten anyone on their game.
Thomas, the 24-year-old from Kentucky who is a major away from joining the young elite in golf, only added to a year of low numbers. He made an eagle on his final hole at the Sony Open in January to shoot 59, and he went on to break the PGA Tour’s 72-hole scoring record.
The U.S. Open didn’t seem to faze him, and he delivered a variety of big shots that led to his sensational finish.
He rolled in an 18-foot birdie putt on No. 5 from the edge of the green that broke so severely that he stood with his toes facing the hole and rapped the ball toward his left foot. It took a hard turn to the right and rolled in. In the hay left of the 12th fairway, he gouged it out with a 9-iron and watched it roll to 10 feet.
Don't expect @HarmanBrian to fold on Sunday.
He knows a thing or two about clutch performances under pressure. pic.twitter.com/ZwCdsR3WMj
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) June 18, 2017
And with the tees moved up on the 15th hole to make it reachable, Thomas hit a 3-wood that rolled off the back slope of the green to 6 feet. He two-putted for birdie, and he rolled in a 25-foot birdie putt on the 17th.
“It doesn’t matter how long, how whatever the course is,” Thomas said about the longest course in major championship history. “When you give us soft greens, good greens and not much wind, you know there are going to be some good scores. I was just happy that I was the one that was able to take advantage of it today.”
But the work is not done.
Of the five other players who shot a 63 in the third round at a major, none went on to win. Most of them had to come from far back going into the weekend, and it was difficult to put together two good rounds.
For the full leaderboard click here.
Canada’s Brogan McKinnon T3 after round two of Decatur Forsyth Classic
Mississauga, Ont., native Brogan McKinnon carded a 6-under-par 66 to move into a tie for third at 7-under-par at the Symetra Tour’s Decatur Forsyth Classic at Hickory Point Golf Course in Decatur, Ill.
McKinnon started the day T43 after an opening round 71 (-1). She recorded six birdies and no bogeys Saturday to sit six shots back of Thailand’s Chorphaka Jaengkit who is 10-under-par (66-68).
A graduate of Team Canada McKinnon has one career top-10 on the Symetra Tour. Her best result this season was a T52 at the Fucillo Classic of NY at Capital Hills at Albany.
Anna Kim (Toronto, Ont.) is T26 at 3-under-par.
For the full leaderboard click here.
Team Canada’s Maddie Szeryk wins Women’s Western
Team Canada Amateur Squad Golfer Maddie Szeryk def. Dylan Kim (Sacshe, Tex.) 3 and 1 in a 36-hole match to to become the first Canadian to win the Western Women’s Golf Association Amateur Championship at River Forest Country Club in Elmhurst Ill.
The London, Ont, native built a 3-up lead through the first 18 holes that she never relinquished. Kim got within 2-down with three to play, but a par-birdie finish by Szeryk secured her the victory.
“We still had 18 holes left so I could have gone 3-down but I stuck to my game plan and pretended it was a new match and that we were all square and tried to play my game and keep going,” said Szeryk
A junior at Texas A&M, Szeryk started the week strong and never looked back. She was the No. 2 seed in the 64-women match play bracket after opening 73-70 to sit 1-under-par after 36 holes of stroke play qualifying.
CONGRATULATIONS to the
117th WWGA National Amateur Champion
MADDIE SZERYK! Maddie def. Dylan Kim, 3 & 1 pic.twitter.com/92fcIXpVMt— WWGA UPDATES (@WWGAGOLF) June 17, 2017
Through multiple weather delays Szeryk won six matches, only going the full 18 holes once, in the semi finals against
The 20-year-old is coming off a record setting year with the Texas A&M. Her 71.24 season stroke average and 128 birdies were both Aggies records. She won the Dr. Donnis Thompson Invitational and finished T13 at the NCAA Division I Championship, earning her First-Team All-American honours.

Szeryk and her Team Canada Amateur Squad teammates Naomi Ko, Grace St-Germain, and Jaclyn Lee won the Maschmeyer Cup in Elmhurst this week for the best team score.
For the full leaderboard click here.
Robby Shelton maintains lead at GolfBC Championship
Wilmer, Alabama’s Robby Shelton managed a 3-under 68 on a windy afternoon at Gallagher’s Canyon Golf and Country Club to maintain his lead at the GolfBC Championship, the third event of the 2017 Mackenzie Tour – PGA TOUR Canada season.
The former University of Alabama standout holed out for eagle at the fifth hole and notched three birdies and two bogeys to lead by one over Folsom, California’s Kevin Lucas and Costa Mesa, California’s Jake Knapp through 36 holes at Gallagher’s Canyon.
“I’m striking the ball really well. That’s not a problem right now,” said Shelton. The 22- year old didn’t hole as many long putts as he did in an opening 8-under 63 Thursday, but was still pleased with how he played. “I didn’t putt as well today, but when you hit fairways and hit greens, you have a lot of opportunities. It feels like I putted bad, but I really didn’t.”
The 2015 U.S. Walker Cup team member took the lead with a closing birdie at the 18th hole, getting up-and-down from short of the green to take the solo overnight lead.
“I really wanted the lead going into tomorrow,” said Shelton. “I hit driver off the tee and that was a little aggressive, but I think it’s the play on that hole. The shot wasn’t that tough and luckily I did it and finally got a putt to fall, which was really nice.”
Lucas matched the day’s best round with a 7-under 64, while Knapp carded his second straight 66 to reach 10-under through two rounds. Australia’s Oliver Goss and Dunedin, Florida’s Lee McCoy were a shot further behind at 9-under.
“This third week, I’ve kind of found my game. These guys are good, there’s no doubt about that. You know the (winning) number’s gonna be low, so you have to be comfortable going low,” said Lucas. “There’s going to be a certain number every week, and it’s going to take some low rounds and your bad rounds still have to be under par.”
Shelton finished third at the 2015 Barbasol Championship on the PGA TOUR, the highest finish by an amateur on the PGA TOUR since Phil Mickelson won the 1991 Northern Telecom Open.
He earned exempt status for the 2017 season by winning the USA East #1 QSchool. He opened his 2017 season with finishes of T20-T14 and ranks 21st on the Order of Merit.
Check out the second round highlights below.
Birdies, bushes, and (B)obby Shelton. All that and more in our second-round highlights from the @gbccchampionship pic.twitter.com/EZojjaDgUy
— Mackenzie Tour (@PGATOURCanada) June 17, 2017
For the full leaderboard click here.
Canadian Anna Kim T8 at Decatur Forsyth Classic
Canada’s Anna Kim carded an opening round 4-under par 68 to sit T8 at the Symetra Tour’s Decatur Forsyth Classic at Hickory Point Golf Course in Decatur, Ill.
The Toronto, Ont., product recorded four birdies and no bogeys Friday to sit three shots back of Linsey Weaver (Scottsdale, Ariz.) who posted an opening round 7-under-par 65. Kim’s 68 was her lowest score of 2017 season.
A graduate of the Team Canada Development Squad, Kim is playing in her third Symetra Tour tournament of the season. Her best result came last week at the Four Winds Invitational at Blackthorn Golf Club where she finished T69.
For the full leaderboard click here.
The top 3 miss US Open cut, leaving 4-way tie for the lead
The biggest surprise at this U.S. Open was not who was leading, but who was leaving.
Dustin Johnson, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day – the top three players in the world, all of them professing expansive Erin Hills to be perfect for their games – spent Friday cleaning out their lockers after missing the cut.
Left behind was the biggest 36-hole logjam in 43 years at the U.S. Open.
Paul Casey chopped his way to a triple bogey, only to respond with five straight birdies that carried him to a 1-under 71 and make him the first to post at 7-under 137. He set the target early under warm sunshine, and even as the wind tapered in the afternoon, no one could catch him.
Brooks Koepka had the lead until he turned a birdie chance into a bogey on the par-5 first hole after making the turn. He didn’t make a birdie the rest of the way and had to settle for a 70. They were joined by Brian Harman and Tommy Fleetwood of England, who each had a 70.
Right behind was a trio of players that included Rickie Fowler, who went 28 holes before making his first bogey and then went three holes without making a par. Fowler shot a 73 and was still very much in the hunt at a second straight major.
The four-way tie was the most after two rounds in a U.S. Open since Winged Foot in 1974, back when the names were more familiar for a major – Raymond Floyd, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player and Hale Irwin, who went on to win his first major.
The last six majors have been won by first-timers, and that cycle has a good chance to continue. The top 18 players on the leaderboard going into the weekend have combined for zero majors. Only a half-dozen of them have even experienced Sunday contention in golf’s biggest events.
“Tomorrow will be a very cool experience,” Fleetwood said. “It’s still Saturday – 36 holes is a very long time in a U.S. Open. Anything can happen.”
Just about everything already has at Erin Hills.
A commercial blimp crashed to the ground and caught fire just outside the course Thursday, about the time the county health department was analyzing samples that confirmed evidence of the E. coli bacteria in water at a hydration station near the 12th hole. The USGA is providing complimentary bottled water the rest of the week. There have been no reports yet of anyone getting sick.
And then Friday, a 94-year-old man at the tournament for the first time stopped breathing while in a grandstand on the sixth hole and died of what Washington County officials said appeared to be natural causes.
Next up is a weekend without most of the biggest names in golf. The cut for the top 60 and ties was at 1-over 145, tying a U.S. Open record set in 1990 at Medinah.
Johnson was hitting it so well that he appeared to be safe even when he was on the cut line. But then he three-putted from long range on the 13th and the 14th, and lost all hope when he missed the green on the 17th while going after the flag. He shot 73 and missed the cut by three.
“I couldn’t have shot any higher,” Johnson said. “I couldn’t possibly shoot any higher than I did. I just struggled on the greens. It’s simple.”
Day never had a chance, following his career-worst 79 in a U.S. Open with a 75. McIlroy came to life when it was far too late. He made four birdies over the last six holes to salvage a 71, but he still missed the cut for the second straight year.
Joining them with a weekend off – British Open champion Henrik Stenson, Alex Noren, Jon Rahm, Justin Rose and Adam Scott. That left only four of the top 12 in the world to play the weekend at Erin Hills.
Fowler has the best chance, even though he lost so much ground over the final two hours. He went from pouring putts into the centre of the cup to burning the edges, and his 39 on the back nine cost him the lead, though not his chances of breaking through for that first major.
“We’re in a good spot,” Fowler said. “Looking forward to the next two days.”
Casey discovered how little it takes to make a big number in the U.S. Open – and at this U.S. Open, how a recovery is never too far away.
Casey laid up in the rough, took two chops to get out of more rough behind the 14th green, and staggered away with a triple-bogey 8 that might have ruined his day at Erin Hills. Moments later, he began a run of five straight birdies that put him right where he wanted to be going into the weekend.
“Not every day you enjoy a round of golf with an 8 on the card, but I’m a pretty happy man,” Casey said. “Yeah, it was a bit of a roller coaster. I guess it’s rare you get through a U.S. Open or any major without some kind of a hiccup.”
Canada’s Adam Hadwin is T24 at 2-under-par after a second round 74.
For the full leaderboard click here.
Team Canada’s Szeryk advances to finals at Women’s Western
Team Canada Amateur Squad member Maddie Szeryk won two matches Friday to advance to the finals of the Women’s Western Golf Association Championship at River Forest Country Club in Elmhurst, Ill.
The London, Ont., product def. Sophia Schubert (Oak Ridge, Tenn.) 1-up in her semi-final match,
The match was back and forth early and was all-square after nine. Szeryk took the lead on No. 13 and held it until a bogey on No. 17 put the match all-square heading to the 18th hole.
On No. 18 Szeryk made a birdie to take the match 1-up.
A junior at Texas A&M, Szeryk defeated the Philippines Francesca Olivarez-Ilas in her morning quarterfinal match.
After eight holes Szeryk was 1-down and yet to win a hole. She got to all-square with a birdie on No. 9 and closed with birdies on 15 and 16 to take the match 3 and 2.
The 20-year-old is coming off a stellar third season with Texas A&M. She set a school record with a 71.24 stroke average and poured in an Aggies record 128 birdies, earning her a First-Team All-American nod.
She will play the 36-hole final tomorrow.
To reach the quarterfinals Szeryk defeated her Amateur Squad teammate, Naomi Ko (Victoria, B.C.) 2 and 1.
The Team Canada Amateur Squad won the Maschmeyer Cup this week in Elmhurst for the best team performance.
For full scores click here.
Canada’s Brooke Henderson stumbles late, keeps two shot lead at Meijer LPGA
Brooke Henderson bogeyed the final two holes for a 4-under 67, leaving the 19-year-old Canadian with a two-stroke lead Friday in the Meijer LPGA Classic.
Henderson of Smiths Falls, Ont., had seven birdies – four in a row on Nos. 9-12 – and three bogeys to reach 12-under 130 and break the 36-hole record at Blythefield. She had a one-stroke lead Thursday after an opening 63.
Her approach on the par-4 17th rolled down a hill and she two-putted.
“Could have been really close to being a great shot,” Henderson said. “I practiced that shot in the practice rounds and it jumped forward on the first bounce there and I don’t think I got that today. So, unfortunately, it’s a tough hole and I just came away with bogey, which is not really what I was looking for.”
On the par-4 18th, she missed the green, left her chip well short and missed the long par putt.
“I kind of let emotions get into things and I was chasing birdie to try and get it back,” Henderson said. “Unfortunately, two bogeys to finish. Hopefully, that just gives me a little bit more motivation going into tomorrow.”
“I’m really excited to be in this position. I haven’t been in it in a little while.” @BrookeHenderson is your leader at #MeijerLPGA pic.twitter.com/MUq1VdMtrx
— LPGA (@LPGA) June 17, 2017
Maude-Aimee Leblanc (65) of Sherbrooke, Que., is 5 under while Hamilton’s Alena Sharp (72) is 3 under. Calgary’s Jennifer Ha shot an opening round 64 but faltered to an 80 on Friday to miss the cut. Augusta James of Bath, Ont., also missed the cut.
Fellow major champion Lexi Thompson, coming off a playoff loss to Ariya Jutanugarn on Sunday in Canada, followed her opening 64 with a 68 to join 2016 runner-up Carlota Ciganda (64) and Mi Jung Hur (66) at 10 under.
Thompson closed with a birdie on 18.
“I kind of peeked with about five holes to go and I think it said minus 14 was leading, and then I just saw on the last minus 12 was,” Thompson said. “But I try not to look at leaderboards, just try to focus on my own game, that’s all I can control.”
Ciganda lost a playoff to Sei Young Kim last year at Blythefield.
“I’ve been playing good,” the Spanish player said. “I’m just excited. It was a good week for me here last year so I have great memories. Yeah, I like the course. I like the greens. I think the crowds are always good, so I’m very excited.”
Henderson won twice last year, taking the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship for her first major, and successfully defending her title in the Cambia Portland Classic. She has a 36-hole lead for the first time since late last September in China in the Reignwood LPGA Classic.
“It’s great to see my name up there,” she said. “It’s been a little bit of a rough season so far, you know, not getting the results that I’ve been looking for. But this week seems to be a turnaround week and, hopefully, I can just finish strong the next two days.”
.@BrookeHenderson showing us how its done at the @MeijerLPGA!
Watch highlights: pic.twitter.com/fzMf3dZ5oa
— LPGA (@LPGA) June 17, 2017
Moriya Jutanugarn was 9 under after a 66.
“It was great,” Moriya Jutanugarn said. “I’ve been playing solid. I rolled the ball good on the green. Everything seems to be good.”
Shanshan Feng (70) topped the group at 8 under. The Chinese player is trying to complete a Michigan sweep after winning the LPGA Volvik Championship three weeks ago in Ann Arbor.
Ariya Jutanugarn, Moriya Jutanugarn’s younger sister, was tied for 30th at 4 under in her first event as the No. 1 player in the world. Lydia Ko, at No. 2 after an 85-week run at the top, was 6 under after a 71. Michelle Wie also was 6 under after her second 68.
Kim had her second 70 to make the cut on the number.
For the full leaderboard click here
Tip: How to properly address your putts
The price of fun
Registering your kids in athletic activities can be a costly endeavour. But for the hours of engagement offered, golf may provide more value than you think.
The value of junior golf can’t be measured strictly monetarily — just ask two-time Canadian Men’s Mid-Amateur champion Kevin Carrigan.
As a child, Carrigan would spend hours at Cedar Hill Golf Course in Saanich, B.C., on Vancouver Island before becoming a junior member at the prestigious Royal Colwood Golf Club in Victoria.
“In the summertime, mom and dad would drop us off on their way to work and they would have to peel us out of there when the golf course was closing and they wanted to go to bed,” chuckles Carrigan, a financial planner with Investors Group. “It’s such a social sport, especially when there’s a group of juniors growing up together.
“The bigger group you have the more you learn, it seems. There are very few places, at 12 years old, where you’re able to go with three other 12-year-olds with no group signing off on it, no chaperons, no anything.”
All the hours Carrigan devoted to practising paid off, earning him a university education at Midland College and then the University of Texas-Arlington, four top 10s in the Canadian Men’s Amateur Championship and two trips to the PGA Tour’s RBC Canadian Open as the Mid-Am winner. He feels compelled to now return the favour through his roles as Junior Chair at Royal Colwood and as co-chair with the British Columbia Golf’s Zone 5 Juniors.
“I received so many life values out of being at the golf course, starting with conducting yourself in a public environment, knowing that everyone is always watching you, and then learning an ability to adapt and relate to others who I had nothing in common with,” he reflects. “You’re 12 and they pair you with an 85-year-old for five hours. They’re not your grandparents, so they don’t have to love you. You have to get to know them and it’s been invaluable for my development as a person, beyond the golf course.”
All at a minimal cost, he might add. Sure, memberships have increased since the days when the 30-year-old used to tour around Cedar Hill and Royal Colwood in his youth, but the access and engagement children receive still compares well to other sports.
“This is something that I’m passionate about, the value of golf when we look at the cost of other sports,” says Jason Giesbrecht, director of golf at Royal Colwood. “I have three kids myself who have gone through soccer and lacrosse and other sports and when you look at the opportunity kids have at a facility like Royal Colwood, where we have 167 acres of open greenspace for kids to run around in and access to practice facilities, it’s invaluable.”
For less than $700 a year, juniors related to adult members can have the facility at their fingertips. That includes organized programming, lessons, tournaments and the ability to play anytime after 2 p.m. Consider a standard round lasts four hours and that can easily amount to 20 hours per week in the summer if that’s how eager the junior is, learning both athletic and life skills while parents are at work.
“For our junior members, in the summer months, this is their home away from home,” Giesbrecht adds of Royal Colwood, which held a Kids Day in March to introduce children from the Island to the sport. “We’ve had great stories of the success of juniors playing competitive golf, but the successes we don’t necessarily hear about are the kids who got to meet a bunch of great people, grow socially and are active.”
The certified PGA of Canada professional also emphasizes the physical activity and fitness golf offers, with no threat of concussions or broken bones either. That added safety in the activity makes his private club’s $57-per-month fee well worth it in his mind.
That cost is higher than most public facilities, which is where a high percentage of juniors are first introduced to the game right across the country.
The City of Edmonton, for example, sells full access junior memberships with unlimited play for $125 at Rundle Golf Course, an 18-hole par-3 track in the city’s east end. Or for $425 you can receive unlimited play at all three city-run venues — Victoria, Riverside and Rundle. There are no time restrictions at Rundle and rounds can be played at Victoria or Riverside anytime from Monday to Friday and after 3 p.m. on weekends and holidays, which still provides plenty of flexibility for other family activities.
Smaller commitments with the city begin at $75 for 90 holes at Rundle specifically, or $200 for 180 holes at any of the three facilities.
In comparison, to register kids for soccer in south Edmonton, parents can pay anywhere from $110 to $275 from the ages of under four to under 18 for one or two games a week, which would total no more than three hours of activity time.
South Jasper Place minor baseball, also in Edmonton, costs $110 for children four to five years of age and increases to $300 for midget-aged players at the house-league level, which usually entails just a few hours per week. It pales in comparison to the minimum four hours per round on the golf course. Meanwhile, rep baseball fees at South Jasper Place jump drastically from $650 to $1,050 for mosquito-AAA to midget-AAA levels, respectively, as travel and tournament costs kick in.

The junior program at Royal Colwood GC consistently delivers great instruction. It prides itself on being inclusive and engaging, no matter the age groups or weather forecast.
“There are so many things that kids can learn from the game of golf; that’s why we say it’s such a fantastic game for them to take up. There is a lot that they learn from it, especially because it’s them individually,” explains Adam Werbicki, an associate pro who directs one of 32 recognized National Golf Development Centres in the country at The Derrick Golf and Winter Club in southwest Edmonton.
“No one else is hitting the shot for them and the successes they achieve comes from them. It challenges structurally and they persevere at their own rate. Kids are like little sponges, so if they’re engaged in it, they’re having fun. It’s amazing how much they can learn and how fast they can learn it,” adds Werbicki, who is in his 11th season at The Derrick, while also highlighting the life skills such as
respect and patience that golf teaches.
On the other side of the country, a junior membership at Green Gables Golf Club in Cavendish, P.E.I., (which allows for playing privileges at the course along with sister spots, Andersons Creek and Forest Hills, nearby) is tabbed at $395 for the season and jumps to $525 for post-secondary students with a valid identification.
In contrast, it’s a bit pricier than soccer registration for the Sherwood-Parkdale Rangers in P.E.I., which begins at $105 for under five and jumps to $135 for under 17s, but that doesn’t account for actual time on field.
In Canada’s largest urban centre, Toronto, a season-long junior membership for $300 unlocks access to each of the city’s five public facilities. It’s targeted at kids between ages 10 and 18 and is tax included. Tee off times after 11 a.m. from Monday to Thursday and after noon from Friday to Sunday when accompanied by a paying adult are the only two restrictions that apply.
“It’s also a game where parents can play alongside their children for a lifetime,” states Giesbrecht, who has had the likes of Carrigan, National Amateur player Naomi Ko (who competed in three LPGA events last year) and Nolan Thoroughgood, a 15-year-old who became the youngest ever to win a B.C. Men’s Amateur Championship in 2016, work through the Royal Colwood junior program. “There are not many sports where you can say that and that is something that is valuable to golf as well.”
“Literally it’s the least expensive babysitting you could have,” laughs Carrigan, who vividly recalls his early days at Cedar Hill, which also produced touring professionals Jim Rutledge and Rick Gibson.
When he wasn’t playing with his parents, he admits hanging around other senior players and that soaking up some of their experience, as players and gentlemen, contributed immensely to his development.
“The golf course is all about telling stories,” Carrigan says. “It’s helped me mould myself into the type of person I wanted to become.”
And that’s exactly what Golf Canada hopes to instill with the Long-Term Player Development plan that comprehensively aligns junior programming coast to coast.
“We’re still in the early stages of being able to measure how effective some of Golf Canada’s junior initiatives are having on participation,” details Jeff Thompson, Golf Canada’s chief sport officer and interim CEO, referring to the Golf in Schools program developed in 2009 that exposes the sport to hundreds of thousands of youngsters at more than 3,100 institutions across the country.
“We want kids to go home and say, ‘Mom and dad, I played golf today. I really loved it, can we go try it?’ To have that start to translate into more kids participating in clinics and camps at facilities; having families become members and getting up the chain to kids participating in competitive programs is important.
“Other sports, like basketball or volleyball, all get introduced at schools and when parents start making decisions of where they register say Jimmy or Sally, it’s usually a sport where they’ve had some exposure. So we felt it was important to get golf into schools.”
The popular belief that golf can become more costly, depending on equipment selections, isn’t inaccurate. But it doesn’t approach where elite hockey has ventured. Some skaters, from 16 to 20 years of age, are now paying upwards of $3,000 to play Junior A, or even Junior B, in hopes of attracting college scholarships.
“There’s a perception that (golf) is expensive but if you’re looking for participation there are opportunities to get reasonably priced value, be it junior memberships or summer camps,” insists Thompson. “It’s very competitive with other sports.
“It’s a great social activity and they learn some great skills like honesty, calling the rules on yourself and the integrity of the game.”
How much that’s worth is for parents to decide.
This article was originally published in the Family Issue edition of Golf Canada Magazine. Click here to view the full magazine
