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Resolution
Declares April 16 As National Golf Day
April 16, 2008
By David Shefter, USGA
Golf is bigger than the motion-picture and video industry, bigger
than newspaper publishing and exceeds revenues from professional
and semi-professional spectator sports combined.
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Such were the staggering numbers released Wednesday at the National
Press Club in Washington, D.C., when April 16 was declared National
Golf Day by a bipartisan Congressional resolution sponsored by U.S.
Representatives John Mica (R-Florida) and Ron Klein (D-Florida).
National Golf Day was supported by all the chief leaders of golf
organizations in this country, including USGA Executive Director
David Fay; PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem; PGA of America Chief
Executive Officer Joe Steranka; CEO of the World Golf Foundation
Steve Mona; CEO of The First Tee Joe Louis Barrow Jr.; and Deputy
Commissioner of the LPGA Tour Libba Galloway. It was also supported
by the representatives from the National Golf Course Owners Association;
Club Managers Association of America; National Golf Course Owners
Association; Society of Golf Course Architects; and Golf Course
Superintendents Association of America.
According to a comprehensive study, the 2005 Golf Economy Report,
commissioned by the World Golf Foundation’s GOLF 20/20 and recently
completed by SRI International, the U.S. golf industry generated
$76 billion in direct economic impact, up significantly from the
$62 billion from 2000. The five-year growth of approximately $14
billion represents an annual growth of 4.1 percent, which is well
ahead of the annual inflation rate of 2.5 percent from 2000-2005.
“We all know that golf is a great game,” said Fay, who also is the
Chairman of the World Golf Foundation. “It’s a great game to play,
[and] it’s a great game to watch. But one of the messages that we
have come to Washington to deliver is not only is it a great game,
but it is a meaningful industry, it’s a meaningful business. And
you can feel that in terms of the economic impact, you can feel
it in terms of the environmental impact and lastly you can feel
it in terms of the human impact.”
Initiatives such as Play Golf America, which is supported by all
the major golf organizations including the USGA, have played a role
in introducing game to more people, and more important, keep them
in a sport they can enjoy for the rest of their lives.
Last year, PGA of America member Dan Rooney created Patriot Golf
Day to help raise money for families who lost a loved one during
the recent military conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Through the
support of the USGA and PGA of America, Rooney’s project took place
at some 3,000 golf facilities, raising $1.1 million to help pay
for college for the sons, daughters and spouses of these fallen
soldiers.
Joe Estes, another PGA professional, has led the Wounded Warriors
program that helps injured soldiers, many of whom are amputees,
enjoy the game of golf despite their disability. Steranka described
one amputee having the ability to drive a golf ball 260 yards.
On the environmental side, the golf industry has taken a leadership
role as a sound steward to ensure less water and pesticides are
used to irrigate courses. Mona, who was the CEO of the Golf Course
Superintendents Association for 14 years, pointed out that only
0.5 percent of the 408 billion gallons of water consumed each day
actually is used on golf courses. In fact, more than 12 percent
of all courses use recycled water and less than 15 percent of courses
use municipal water.
“A lot of people perceive that golf is new to this ‘green’ movement,”
said Mona. “But the fact is that golf has been involved in what
we term the ‘green’ movement for 2½ decades.”
And on the human side, golf generated $3.5 billion in 2005 for charitable
organizations. The USGA alone has given more than $59 million since
announcing its For the Good of the Game Grants Initiative in 1997
and is the largest single contributor to The First Tee. Golf’s
professional tours contribute $130 million annually to charities
such as St. Jude’s Hospital and Homes for Dysfunctional Families,
which receive monies from the PGA Tour’s Stanford St. Jude Championship
in Memphis, Tenn., and the EDS Byron Nelson Championship in Irving,
Texas, respectively.
“Golf is truly the unique platform for charitable giving and it
has done so over the years,” said Finchem. “The values that golf
represents that we teach to our kids through the game, create this
feeling of giving back. And secondly, golf in and of itself lends
itself to giving and charitable activities.
“But the monies generated don’t really tell the story of what the
dollars do to impact people.”
Broadening the game to juniors, women and minorities have long been
key targets for these organizations. Throughout the month of June,
golf courses around the country will offer women free golf lessons
and golf-related networking and social activities through the LPGA’s
Women’s Golf Month initiative.
In terms of making the game more affordable, Steranka pointed out
that a family four can still enjoy a round of golf for less money
than attending a professional sporting event.
“The average price of a nine-hole round of golf is $12,” said Steranka.
“I know there are places in Florida where I live that offer free
golf to juniors during the off-season (summer months).”
Globally, the USGA and PGA Tour are working hard in an attempt to
get golf back on the Olympic program for 2016, a place it hasn’t
been since the 1904 Games in St. Louis. The International Olympic
Committee will discuss adding or deleting any new sports in the
fall of 2009. The feeling is if golf does back into the Games, it
could go a long way in developing the game in many countries where
the sport still is in its infancy stage.
Certain logistics, of course, would need to be worked out, especially
in terms of possible scheduling conflicts with major championships
and other big tournaments. But Finchem believes these obstacles
can be overcome.
“The decision will be made next year and the IOC has indicated several
time that they are very interested,” said Finchem, who blogged this
week on pgatour.com about his strong feelings for adding golf to
the Olympics. “But the IOC has their own bureaucracy and their own
process to work through. They have a constitution that says if you
are going to accept a new sport, you have to drop a sport. But I
think we are prepared to work together in interfacing with the IOC
to deal with our issues and give it our best chance.”
The International Golf Federation, which conducts the biennial World
Amateur Team Championships, has been pushing to have golf back in
the Games, and with the professional tours offering support, that
process can move forward.
“The good news is that each of those seven cities [bidding for the
2016 Games] could handle golf,” said Fay, a joint secretary for
the IGF along with the Royal and Ancient’s Peter Dawson. “The good
news is that golf would not require the building of a new stadium.
The good news is that golf is a sport that lends itself to Paralympics
competition.”
A study conducted by the USGA and R&A of its IGF member countries
came back overwhelmingly in support of having golf in the Olympics.
“If golf does become an Olympic sport,” said Fay, “that would be
the greatest act in terms of jump-starting the growth of the sport
in our countries, in terms of possible revenue it could get from
the IOC, in terms of possible revenue it could get from its national
Olympic bodies and even in some cases, the government themselves.
There’s a lot of work to be done, but I think we are all eager to
put our shoulder to the stone.”
David Shefter is a USGA staff writer. E-mail
him with questions or comments at dshefter@usga.org.
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