Ward – I am very excited to see your post! This is my pet project for 2007 (and beyond). One of my best friends is the Executive Director of the Greenville County Recreational District in my home town of Greenville, SC. We have been discussing this very subject for years, and his dream is to build a facility for kids and beginning golfers. The ultimate goal is to have several youth courses scattered around the county with an organized team-golf program similar to the ones that exist in most areas for soccer.
The main holdup to proceeding with this project has been funding... until last Tuesday night when our county council approved an entertainment tax for the purpose of funding recreational opportunities for our residents! This tax is expected to generate revenue of around 6.75 million dollars a year by adding 2% to all restaurant tabs in the county. it goes into effect in April.
I wish TOM DOAK or FORREST RICHARDSON or MIKE YOUNG or one of the other progressive architects who post on this site would get an interest in working on a project like this. I think it can truly change the future of golf.
There are two facts that stand out in the research we have done: 1) only 5% of "golfers" ever achieve "skilled player" status (as defined by a single-digit handicap); 2) only about 5% of golfers who have an official USGA handicap ever play in a sanctioned stroke play tournament. These numbers are true for adults, but they are also true for kids. 95% of the kids who try golf will never be "skilled" players... yet, 95% of our junior programs and teaching is focused on identifying and creating "skilled" players with an emphasis on strokeplay competition.
We think if kids were given the opportunity to participate in a program that emphasized team play in a non-threatening fun way they would fall in love with the GAME of golf and get hooked… the way most of us have. We want to create a program patterned after the soccer model in which kids can ENJOY golf as a GAME and not get turned off because they can't score as well as the 5% of kids who will eventually go into traditional junior programs and play strokeplay tournament golf. We want to teach kids that golf can be fun and doesn’t have to just be about someone asking, “what did you shoot?”
We hope to create a program that will help create the 95% of the next generation of golfers who will never have a single-digit handicap or play in a strokeplay tournament. But, to do it we have to have courses that kids enjoy and find interesting... and, provide them access on the weekends! You can’t just put kids out on a flat field and expect them get excited about chasing a little ball. And, you can’t just limit their course access to Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. Offer them something every day of the week that is fun and “just challenging enough,” and they will come back for more and more and more.
God how I wish Doak or Richardson or Young or Cowley, et.al. would get excited about a project like this. How great would it be to work on our version of the Balgrove and Strathtyrum courses?
2007 could be a great year!