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Fergus Bisset: Raising the standard

  • Thursday, 3 December 2009
  • Fergus Bisset
  • 2 Comments

The Alliance travelled to Buckpool yesterday. It's an excellent course on the Moray coast and one that's much overlooked. It seems fairly ordinary at first glance - the clubhouse won't be winning any architectural awards and the section of course visible from the car park looks flat and fairly wide open. But, get out onto the links and there are a number of superb holes cut through the gorse and played over undulating terrain.

If you look past the lack of pro shop and the slightly utilitarian facilities, Buckpool is a great course to visit for the golfing purist. It's a good layout in good condition with an excellent blend of challenging holes and birdie chances. At just £22 per round I can't think of anywhere within a 100 mile radius that offers better value for money. Actually, I can't think of anywhere full stop.

Buckpool is a famous venue on the circuit because, in 1999, Paul Lawrie won the Alliance here before going on to win the Open Championship later in the year. What made his victory more remarkable (the Buckpool Alliance one that is) was the fact he had a 10 on his scorecard yet still returned an under-par total.

I travelled north with hopes of a decent showing. A couple of reasonable knocks around the winter course at Banchory had given me an unusual injection of optimism. My positive outlook was bolstered by the fact the skies were clearing as we approached the coast and the thermometer on my dashboard was reading 8 degrees (tropical for this time of year in Aberdeenshire.)

My pre-round hopes proved to be warranted as I negotiated the course quite effectively in a level par 70. I avoided any major mistakes - no balls in the gorse or out of bounds. I kept everything together nicely (swing and fragile psyche) as I made three birdies, three bogeys and the rest pars.

For me, level par at Buckpool was a good effort, but I was nowhere near winning. Jordan Findlay, a former British Boys' champion, took the victory with a five-under-par 65. My playing partner Scott Larkin - a +2 handicapper and former golf scholarship student at the College of Charleston - was second with 66. Four more players broke par.

There are currently 17 members of the North East Alliance playing off plus figure handicaps, when you include the pros too, there's a huge number of extremely good golfers competing.

Are there more quality golfers than ever before? There seems to be a torrent of talented young amateurs emerging at the moment and competition at the top level is intense. To have such a number of plus figure handicappers in one region seems pretty amazing, but I'm sure it's a similar story in all parts of the country.

The margins of separation at the elite end of the golfing spectrum have become minute. To move from top county player to international amateur to touring professional may require a huge psychological step but nowhere near such a leap in terms of scoring. The big four-round amateur events in the UK tend to be won with massively under par totals while international amateur competitions witness scoring that's comparable to professional events. As an example, the leading qualifiers for the matchplay stages of the recent Argentina amateur championship recorded two-round totals of eight-under-par.

There are many reasons for the rising quality of amateur golf. More youngsters are playing full-time and are fully dedicated to improvement. These guys receive great support from golf unions and foundations as well as guidance on fitness, nutrition and psychology. Young amateurs also receive more and better instruction than ever before. Highly skilled coaches can employ the latest teaching techniques and relevant equipment to make the very most out of every student's game. Improved kit has enabled more players to make it to the top by levelling the playing field - drivers to hit the ball further, forgiving irons to absolve more mis-hits, range finders to give exact yardages etc. Custom fitting ensures every player has exactly the right clubs to maximise their chances. I also think, success breeds success. The more good young players who emerge, the more of their contemporaries will play with them, watch them and learn from them - improving their games as a result.

The army of young amateurs playing full-time golf is expanding and so, therefore, will the competition to make a successful step up to the paid ranks. That's for them to worry about. I'm more concerned about how I'm going to get past these youngsters to win an Alliance. Re-reading the above paragraph, I suppose I'll have to start running, watching what I eat, going for lessons and to a mind coach, buy some new gear, oh and give up working. I think I should probably start focussing my attentions on the handicap prize.

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December 07 16:54

Tiger

Hi Fergus,

I think the main difference today is the number of young players that have emerged prominently in recent years. While technology developments have made the game more forgiving I remember watching Justin Rose almost winning the Open as an amateur and thinking this isn't an old mans game. Certainly people like Tiger Woods have helped change the perception of golfers, and they are now more regarded and viewed as athletes.

There are young players that go to my driving range who genuinely believe that with enough practice and perseverance they can be the next Rory McIlroy. Don't get me wrong, as someone who has worked in sport, golf clubs are increasingly seeing the importance of the junior section, but golf is much 'cooler' than it was and the potential financial rewards are a large enough hook to get lots of young players interested.

The historic challenge is if you get two or three talented young players and one loses interest the others may well follow suit. However, you get 10 or 12 and all of a sudden they are much more likely to practice, play and compete with and against each other.

I'm gutted I've started playing so late but the concessionary prices just didn't exist when I were a lad. I just hope golf clubs across the country continue (or start in some cases) supporting young golfers as that is the way we will finally end the drought of Major winners from our fair isles.

December 10 10:50

Fergus Bisset

Thanks for this Tiger. I think you're spot on. If you get a group of young guys playing, practising and competing with each other, they're more likely to stick with the sport and strive hard to be the best they can. And, with so many youngsters like McIlroy, Ishikawa, Hutsby et al. making a successful transition to the pro ranks, younger players believe they could potentially reap huge rewards from the sport.

The only thing is - the more super-talented young guys that emerge, the more competition there is for those (relatively) few spots in the upper echelons of the game. Do you think there may be an increasing number of excellent players, who've dedicated their early adult lives to golf, who don't make the grade and are then a little stuck...?

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