1 minute read

It’s all about the swing

GOLF will welcome many new players with a disability to the game if a groundbreaking project is successful

The body that oversees the game in the UK and abroad is spending a year examining the golf swing of players with impairments,

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EDGA (formerly the European Disabled Golf Association) believes the study will lead to better competitive opportunities, fewer injuries, and more disabled people playing the game

A key ambition of the project is to improve on the current classification of players with different impairments into “sports classes” that will ultimately help the golf industry to understand and attract more of the 15% of people worldwide who have a disability

Work began at back-to-back EDGA Tour events in Portugal in January and the aim is to analyse at least 200 golfers over the next year, including players with visual impairments Research will continue at key EDGA Tour events in Scotland, Ireland and England, including at the inaugural The G4D Open, staged by The R&A with support from the DP World Tour, at Woburn in May

EDGA project leader Dr Roger Hawkes, said a detailed examination of the swing of players with a disability “should give the golf industry far better understanding of how different impairments influence a golf swing, thus unlocking a door to the needs of more golfers

“This research will help golf’s governing bodies in the important areas of classification, and sports classes, around different player impairments for events ”

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