Sunday 2 December 2018

DOUGLAS PARK SECRETARY GIVES HER OVERVIEW AT THE SCOTTISH GOLF CONFERENCE OF THE GETINTOGOLF CAMPAIGN

After a very good campaign last year in the GetIntoGolf at Douglas Park Golf Club and further advertising -- Douglas Park Secretary Ann Scott gave an overview at the Scottish Golf Conference in Edinburgh yesterday

The official Scottish Golf video can be found by CLICKING HERE and you can go to approx 1hour 47 minutes and then to 1 hour 56 minutes. - to hear her interview (much better quality and sound) 

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE ORIGINAL EVENT LAST YEAR AND VIDEO

AND HERE FOR THE SCOTTISH GOLF REPORT

Paul Lawrie has described the new Scottish Golf App as Phenomenal


Paul Laurie 
By Martin Dempster

Paul Lawrie has described Scottish Golf’s trail-blazing new app as “phenomenal” and believes it can help turn the golf centre he owns on the outskirts of Aberdeen into a profit-making facility.

The 1999 Open champion delivered his glowing endorsement for the digital platform, which is being offered free to golf clubs around the country at a time when just 21 per cent of the total golfing population in the sport’s birthplace is made up of club members, as he attended the second Scottish Golf national conference in Edinburgh. 

Lawrie, who is actively involved in running his golf centre on the south side of the River Dee along with his wife Marian, also gave a thumbs-up to the governing body encouraging clubs to allow so-called nomadic golfers to gain handicaps by playing in open competitions.

“It is hugely challenging, no matter who you are,” said Lawrie during a chat on stage with Iain Forsyth, Scottish Golf’s commercial director, in front of 450 fellow delegates, when asked about his facility. “The golf industry has not gone through the best of times and hasn’t done for a long, long time. Our facility currently runs at a slight loss every year and has done for a wee while, but we are trying to change that.

“We’ve got a lot of talented people who work very hard for us and we have recently become a Scottish Golf-affiliated club so people can get a handicap with us now. We’ve put in a couple of new tees to give us two par-4s and seven par-3s. You can play a medal now and that has helped us a little bit, but, having said that, we only gained 28 or 29 new members through that, so it is still a little bit of a struggle. 
“But if people who are not members of a club are able to have a handicap, if that meant a club like us was able to lay on a competition that would see 40 or 50 new golfers paying a green fee every week, that could be the difference. That would be a lot of money for a golf club like our one that loses money.”

Lawrie was speaking before the new app, which has been developed by leading tech company OCS for Scottish Golf to allow clubs to fully exploit income from pay-and-play golfers, was rolled out to delegates, the majority of whom were golf club administrators and committee members.
“I just had a wee look at the app and it is just phenomenal,” added Lawrie. “For a golf centre like us, it will be great to have this free app. Who’s not wanting that as a golf club? I think people will be blown away when they see it. We will certainly be using it and we will be embracing it to try and turn a corner for us and I think it will.”

A more positive event than the inaugural one 12 months ago, when the focus was on the fact that 5,000 club members in Scotland had been lost each year for a decade, this conference started with chair Eleanor Cannon saying she felt confident Scottish Golf’s stakeholders had now “united” after a “turbulent time over ten years”.

In his address, chief executive Andrew McKinlay said that the governing body had a “firm financial footing” thanks to its stakeholders agreeing to an increase in the affiliation fee earlier in the year while Ross Duncan, the development director, updated delegates on a staff re-shuffle – seven regional development managers will be backed up by six central support managers – that is aimed at helping clubs in the ongoing fight with declining memberships. “Everyone has to be at the heart of change. Live it and breathe it!” he said. One of the main changes being sought is getting more women into the game at a time when females make up only 13 per cent of the total membership in Scotland. The governing body is also keen to change a culture that currently sees 83.5 per cent of clubs holding their main competitions on a Saturday reserved for men.

“Last year was a line in the sand,” said McKinlay, who attended that event as a member when he still worked for the Scottish Football Association, as he summed up this conference. “Since I came in I’ve felt nothing but goodwill. Everyone wants to go in the right direction. We have given them some specific things. Maybe they are not used to that. Maybe they are just used to talk. But I think people feel quite upbeat about what we are trying to do.”

Scottish Golf outlines ambitious plans for future at National Conference





By Michael McEwan (Bunkered Magazine) 

That was the rallying cry from chief executive Andrew McKinlay at Scottish Golf’s National Conference.
The event, which took place at the EICC in Edinburgh yesterday , was attended by over 450 delegates from across the game and saw the national governing body provide details of strategies it has devised to safeguard the sport’s future and that of its constituent clubs, as well as an update on performance across the spectrum of the grassroots game.
The underlying theme was one of looking to the future and “leaving Scottish golf better than we found it”

Referencing the book Legacy by James Kerr, which documents the culture of the All Blacks, New Zealand’s all-conquering rugby union side, McKinlay said: “They believe firmly in many things but one of those things is something called whakapapa, which means ‘to be a good ancestor’
“That is what we all must strive to be, as we are simply custodians of this wonderful game in the home of golf.”

The conference took place almost a year to the day from the first such conference, which was arranged with Scottish Golf in disarray following the resignation of McKinlay’s predecessor Blane Dodds and with the controversial strategy he had outlined having been stood down in the face of widespread criticism.


McKinlay was in attendance last year as a golf club member but, having been appointed chief executive of the organisation in February, had a prominent role today, where the mood in the room was considerably more optimistic than this time 12 months ago.
Well it might be, too.
After having been rejected earlier in the year, Scottish Golf finally saw plans to increase its affiliation fee pushed through in October. That, in turn, has allowed the organisation to budget better for the coming years and put in place a number of plans to help golf clubs adapt to match consumer behaviour. 

Central to those plans is a brand new digital management system, which was unveiled today.
Developed by OCS Sport, which works with more than 30 pro golf tours worldwide, it will allow clubs to “take control of business” through a single, centralised system. It will provide everything from tee time bookings, to a point of sale system to a free, to customisable website for every club, area and county in the country. What’s more, it is completely free of charge. 

The app will also be free to download for golf club members, enabling them to book tee times quickly and easily, as well as track their scores and access a virtual caddie. 
Non golf club members will also be able to download the app but will be required to pay a small fee for the privilege.
All of the revenue generated will be reinvested into the game in a bid to redress an imbalance 

Amongst other things, Scottish Golf believes this will help tackle the issue of handicap-only memberships and third party handicap providers. 

Improving finances is the third of three pillars of the new Scottish Golf strategy and, according to McKinlay, is the one that was the “most challenging” issue to come out of last year’s conference.




“I have spent much of my time since I came into the job working with our chief financial, Iain Forsyth,” he said. “A particular challenge was laid down at last year’s conference about our non-membership income and also around how we harness the wealth of the pay-per-play golfers within the Scottish golf family.”

Referencing Henry Ford, he added: “If you always do what you’ve always done, you will always get what you’ve always got. You don’t turn a circa £3.5m business into a £6m+ turnover, which is what we’re looking to do within the next four years, by getting a few sponsorship agreements here and there. You need to come up with something far more radical.”
The new club management platform would appear to be that “something”.

Former Open champion Paul Lawrie was amongst those in attendance today in his capacity as a golf centre proprietor and he said he was 'blown away’ by the new digital package.
“The app is just phenomenal,” added Lawrie, who revealed that his Aberdeenshire facility has been operating at a small loss ‘for some time’. “For a golf centre like ours, it’s going to be fantastic. We’ll be using it to try to help turn the corner.”
Of course, creating the tools is just the beginning; getting people to use them will be where the battle is won and lost.
That’s something that is in no way lost on McKinlay.
“Technology is only an enabler so it’s now all about the marketing of it,” he said. “We’re going to have to work hard to get the story out there, both through external channels and our own marketing." 

OTHER NOTES FROM THE SCOTTISH GOLF NATIONAL CONFERENCE

• Andrew McKinlay revealed that Scottish Golf had a “very, very positive” meeting with sportscotland recently and hopes to announce a “substantial” four-year commitment from the organisation in January.
• On the junior front, plans for a new “national junior framework” are “progressing well”, whilst the 12-strong Young Persons Golf Panel will start in January. Scottish Golf also intends a national roll out of its Junior Golf Sixes programme in 2019, with the final potentially taking place in the lead up to the Solheim Cup at Gleneagles.
• Scottish Golf is aiming to get 100 clubs signed up to the R&A Women & Girls Charter in 2019 as it aims to increase the proportion of female golf club members in Scotland (currently 13%). 

Saturday 1 December 2018

LIVE STREAM FROM THE SCOTTISH GOLF CONFERENCE TODAY




The meeting today was attended around 450 people of various golfing walks of life, was a largely upbeat and wide-ranging forum which promoted innovation and fresh thinking while attempting to address long-standing issues which continue to make for grim reading. 

The well-documented statistic, for instance, that only 13 per cent of Scotland’s membership is female remains a real problem  “It’s not good enough,” said McKinlay bluntly. In addition, around 83 per cent of clubs still have their main men’s competition reserved for a Saturday which alienates the working woman. “Women don’t have equal opportunities,” added Ross Duncan, Scottish Golf’s development director. “Change requires a significant shift in attitude.”

The whole LIVE STREAMING is on YOU TUBE  and conference begins at 12 minutes  - Just move the slider along to catch the different presentations;

Scottish Women players were highlighted during the conference and also the many volunteers including Mary Richardson, Yvonne Dickson  and Carol Fell - 1 hour 28.30 minutes approx

Eleanor Cannon -- 20 minutes in
Andrew McKinlay - 27. 40 minutes in
Ross Duncan 49 minutes in and introduces --
David Connor - Visit Scotland - The Solheim Cup 1 hour 33 minutes 
Club Panel introduction --  1 hour 41 minutes and interviews
Ian Forsyth - 2 hours 26 minutes
Our Offering Ian Forsyth and Paul Lawrie 2 hours 46 minutes 
OCS App presentation - 2 hours 59 minutes


Prestwick St Nicholas's Junior Member Rachael Foster was also on the club panel -- See below 


Friday 30 November 2018

SCOTLAND LADIES GOLFER RANKINGS IN NOVEMBER 2018

mygolfranking.net SCOTLAND LADIES GOLFERof NOVEMBER 2018 is ANNA TURNER (CarlukeLadieswho remains top of SCOTLAND LADIES MGRANKING.
 
mygolfranking.net SCOTLAND LADIES CLUB of the WEEK is ANSTRUTHER LADIES entering the Top 10 of SCOTLAND LADIES CLUB MGRANKING at No 3.

SCOTLAND LADIES – WEEK 18/47*New entry this week

 

1ANNA TURNER (Carluke) 1339 points 

2Elizabeth Donaldson (Kirkintilloch) 1281 

3Eilidh Henderson (Kirkcaldy) 1249 

4Jayne McDougall (Callander) 1224

5Linda Jack (Dumfries & Galloway) 1198 

6Fiona Norris (Hamilton) 1180    

7Jane Tough (Brechin) 1167

8Carol Fell (Douglas Park) 1149 

9Sarah Murray (Nairn Dunbar) 1144

10Orla O’Leary (Torwoodlee) 1143 

11Margaret Cairns (Dunning) 1136

12 Jane Clark (Airdrie) 1125 

13  Vicki Paterson (Inverurie) 1118 

14Corisande Lee (Dumfries & Galloway) 1117 

15Jane Grubb (Montrose Mercantile) 1113

16Carina Bunyan (Roxburghe) 1105 

17Janet Wilson (Anstruther) 1102 

T18Kerry Lockerbie (Crichton), Gillian Wallace (Milnathort) 1096

20Joan Pratt (Moray) 1089

SCOTLAND LADIES  CLUBS

 

1CARLUKE 968 points

2Torwoodlee 940

3  *Anstruther 938 

4Carrickvale 936

5Balbirnie Park 930 

6 Palacerigg 929

7Bridge of Allan 921 

8Kirkcaldy 917 

T9CloberMinto 913

 

If you and any of your golfing friends would like to regularly check out your Club MGRanking, the full Regional, National and International MGRankingsMovers & Shakers, How It Works and free Registration for golfers and clubs,visit mygolfranking

Chief executive Andrew McKinlay is looking forward to steering Scottish Golf to an App-ier future in tandem with Eleanor Cannon.

Eleanor Cannon and Andrew McKinlay

By Martin Dempster - The Scotsman

It was recently announced that Eleanor Cannon, the inaugural chair of the unified governing body, is to stand for a new three-year term at the annual general meeting next March.
Speaking as he prepared to lead the second Scottish Golf national conference in Edinburgh tomorrow, McKinlay said that he had warmly welcomed that development.

“We’ve been through such a turbulent time, it’s important we have a bit of continuity and stability,” he commented. “From that perspective, it’s good she will stay on to see us through this period. She has been a great support to me and I’m looking forward to working with her.”

Still working for the Scottish Football Association, McKinlay attended the inaugural conference 12 months ago as a club member and, along with the other delegates, was painted a picture of doom and gloom as golf clubs battle a decline in membership.
The Carrick Knowe club shutting its doors earlier this month shows that is ongoing but McKinlay says this weekend’s conference will hopefully galvanise clubs around the country.

“I’m going in with genuine positivity,” he said. “Last year was, I wouldn’t say a reality check, as we probably all knew the situation, but it was good to have it all set out, this is where we are, we have a problem here, we need to do some radical stuff to fix some of this. 
“This time it will be much more about looking forward. It’s vital we move forward. The big takeaway for me from last year was the criticism that only six per cent of our income was commercial income. 
“One of the targets we have set is to effectively double our turnover in the next four-year cycle. We don’t do that by picking up the odd commercial deal here and there. You have to do something quite radical.”

How to tackle the so-called golfing nomads has been one of McKinlay’s main objectives since he took up the post seven months ago and he’s aiming to do that through a new Scottish Golf App.
It will be part of a new computer system that is being offered free to member clubs, with the aim for clubs to get 100 per cent of the green fee from pay-to-play golfers. - READ MORE

“This new system will connect all those who play the game in Scotland,” added McKinlay. “We have a situation at the moment where circa 21 per cent of golfers are members and they are paying most of the upkeep of courses in Scotland. 
“You have another 80 per cent, who are paying some by paying green fees, but this system will look at ways of bringing them into the fold, so I think Saturday should be a much more positive experience than last year.
“That was a moment in time. We brought it together to say ‘this is it, we need to stop talking and turn the corner’. Membership is still declining, we know that. Traditional membership will continue to decline. 
“We need to redefine what that looks like because participation is not declining. We have to get that pay-per-play golfer part right.

“We have 600 clubs. Maybe 100 are doing okay, have good visitor numbers, maybe a waiting list. I might be overegging that number. There are probably 100 at the bottom who are in a really difficult position and that leaves a massive amount in the middle who may be bobbing along but need encouragement to be more open, more welcoming, change their culture and encourage more women and juniors to play golf. We don’t have a stick to beat them with.”

Thursday 29 November 2018

SO WHATS NEW FOR 2019 BECOME A RULES GURU — PART 2 -- PENALTY DROPS



In 2019, ‘water hazards” will be replaced by the expanded concept of ‘penalty areas.’ As now, players will get relief with a one stroke penalty if their ball comes to rest in this area. But, there will no longer be any special restrictions when a ball is in a penalty area. 

Here’s the detail:

  • There will be two types of penalty area. The first will include all areas currently defined in the Rules as a water hazard or lateral water hazard. The second will include any other areas the Committee chooses to define as penalty areas. Recommended guidelines on this will be provided in the guidebook.
  • Penalty areas may therefore include desert, jungle, lava rock fields and so on. 
  • The two types of penalty areas will be known by the colour of their marking: yellow, which gives two relief options; and red which gives the additional option of lateral relief. Committees will be given the discretion to mark all penalty areas as red so that lateral relief will always be allowed. 
  • The term “hazard” will no longer be used in the Rules.
  • A player will be allowed to touch or move loose impediments and touch the ground with hand or club for any reason. For example, a player can ground the club right behind the ball. However, they must not improve conditions for the stroke.

AYRSHIRE, D&A,LANARKSHIRE AND RENFREWSHIRE - MYGOLF RANKING WEEK 47 - 2018


mygolfranking.net AYRSHIRE LADIES GOLFER of Week 18/47 is KELLY MCNEE (Loudoun Gowf) who retains her position at top of Ayrshire Ladies MGRanking.
 
AYRSHIRE LADIES TOP 20

1 KELLY MCNEE (Loudoun Gowf) 1056 points 
Emma Thomson (Loudoun Gowf) 1032
Sheena Murchie (Lamlash) 1021 
Christine Whitelaw (Largs) 1016 
Audrey Thompson (Loudoun Gowf) 1014
6 Catherine Garrett (West Kilbride) 1001
Jean Capes (Largs) 972
8 Aileen Anderson (Loudoun Gowf) 970 
T9 Maureen Paterson (Prestwick St Cuthbert), Pauline Patrick (Irvine) 953
11 Joanne Sharp (Kilmarnock (Barassie)) 927
12 Linda McDonald (Kilmarnock (Barassie)) 915
13 Lindsay Smith (Troon Welbeck) 909
14 Christine Fyfe (Kilmarnock (Barassie)) 908
15 Gillian Gowers (Loudoun Gowf) 905
16 Lesley Lloyd (Troon GC Ladies) 898
17 Helen Craig (West Kilbride) 897
18 Gillian Kyle (Troon GC Ladies) 896
19 Helen Love (Kilmarnock (Barassie)) 891
20 Elaine Sirel (Largs) 890

mygolfranking.net DUNBARTONSHIRE & ARGYLL GOLFER of Week 18/47 is ELIZABETH DONALDSON (Kirkintilloch Ladies) who remains top of Dunbartonshire & Argyll MGRanking.

DUNBARTONSHIRE & ARGYLL LADIES

1 ELIZABETH DONALDSON (Kirkintilloch) 1281 points 
2 Carol Fell (Douglas Park) 1149 
Shaeen Ahmad (Balmore) 1048 
4 Belinda Goldsmith (Hilton Park) 1027 
5 Ashley Duffy (Clober) 1015 
6 Susan McGrenaghan (Hayston) 1014
7 Elaine McEwan (Douglas Park) 1008
T8 Karen Haggarty (Dumbarton), Elaine Provan(Palacerigg) 1003
T10 Sandra Donnelly (Bearsden), Susan Rattray(Douglas Park) 991
12 Elizabeth Marrison (Dunaverty) 984
13 Lindsay McCubbin (Hilton Park) 975
14 Miranda McAinsh (Bearsden) 968
15 Janice Cullens (Douglas Park) 962
16 Elizabeth McMillan (Rothesay) 955
17 Olive Spicer (Bearsden) 950
18 Lorraine Campbell (Cardross) 929
19 Gillian Morrison (Clober) 927
20 Morag McFarlane (Balmore) 925

mygolfranking.net LANARKSHIRE LADIES GOLFER of Week 18/47 is ANNA TURNER (CarlukeLadies) who remains at the top of Lanarkshire Ladies MGRanking.

LANARKSHIRE LADIES 

1 ANNA TURNER (Carluke) 1339 points
2 Fiona Norris (Hamilton) 1180
3 Jane Clark (Airdrie) 1125 
4 Jacqueline Moon (Bothwell Castle) 1004 
5 Amanda Bryce (Carnwath) 994
6 Dee Docherty (Playsport) 993 
Nichola Craig (Lanark) 989 
8 Ruth Hunter (Lanark) 984
Dorrien Malcolm (Hollandbush) 977 
10 Helen Todd (Biggar) 969
11 Fiona Argo (Playsport GC) 962
12 Susan Woodhouse (East Kilbride) 958
13 Amy McDonald (Bothwell Castle) 954
14 Christine Anne Sinclair (Carluke) 953
15 Carol Collins (Lanark) 952
16 Joyce Chalmers (East Kilbride) 938
17 Pam Connacher (Colville Park) 935
18 Kym Diamond (Colville Park) 932
19 Julie Cummings (Hamilton) 928
20 Colette Maule (East Kilbride) 923

mygolfranking.net RENFREWSHIRE LADIES GOLFER of Week 18/47 is ALLISON MURRAY (Ranfurly Castle Ladies) who remains at the top of Renfrewshire Ladies MGRanking.

RENFREWSHIRE LADIES

ALLISON MURRAY (Ranfurly Castle) 1074 points
2 Margo Maxwell (Old Course Ranfurly) 1015 
Jan Macnab (Ranfurly Castle) 1009
4 Brenda Conway (Renfrew) 983 
5 Catherine Goldinger (Bonnyton) 981 
6 Shirley Bell (Old Course Ranfurly) 976 
7 Vivien Howe (Ranfurly Castle) 961
8 Sheila Biggart (Ranfurly Castle) 959
9 Beth Paterson (Eastwood) 941
10 Jane Ross (Elderslie) 940
11 Linda Ellery (East Renfrewshire) 914
12 Linda McDougall (Greenock) 907
T13 Patricia Davidson (Erskine), Marie Doherty (Erskine) 887
15 Anne Judge (Ranfurly Castle) 885
16 Cherry Briggs (Kilmacolm) 875
17 Sandra Chudleigh (Renfrew) 872
18 Ann McKenzie (Old Course Ranfurly) 864
T19 Birgit Clark (Old Course Ranfurly), Susan Morrow (Caldwell) 860

If you and your golfing friends would like to regularly check out your Club MGRanking, the full Regional, National and International MGRankings, Movers and Shakers, How It Works and free Registration for golfers and clubs, visit mygolfranking.net