Golf goals: Making room for athletes with disabilities
Opportunities for golfers with disabilities are expanding 鈥 including the debut of the U.S. Adaptive Open on July 18 鈥 thanks to perseverance by the athletes and their allies.
Opportunities for golfers with disabilities are expanding 鈥 including the debut of the U.S. Adaptive Open on July 18 鈥 thanks to perseverance by the athletes and their allies.
Joakim Bj枚rkman, a professional听golfer, credits the sport with saving his life.
When he was young, he was subjected to constant staring and taunts because of his short stature. Eventually, he was hospitalized with a panic attack. For two years, he stayed mostly at home 鈥 often leaving only to play golf. Inspired by Tiger Woods, he now wonders what his life would have been like without the game.
鈥淲hen I was on the golf course, all the stress was gone,鈥 says the Swede, now in his early 30s. 鈥淚t was my sanctuary,鈥 he adds during a recent interview听at the Henrik Stenson Paragolf Challenge near here in June.
Mr. Bj枚rkman is one of many athletes planning to participate in an important tournament for disabled golfers this year: the inaugural U.S. Adaptive Open, sponsored by the听United States Golf Association (USGA), at Pinehurst Resort & Country Club in North Carolina.
There, from July 18 to 20, Mr.听Bj枚rkman, who has won some 35 titles in competitions, will join 95 other elite male and female golfers from 29 states and 11 countries听to compete on the resort鈥檚 famed course No. 6.
The tournament represents one way opportunities for golfers with disabilities are expanding. More chances to train and compete have opened up in recent years, along with calls to have golf included in the Paralympics. The increased inclusion is the result of perseverance on the part of the athletes and a push by the golfers and their allies for equal access to the links.听
鈥淚 see the social and competitive playing opportunities for individuals with disabilities only growing,鈥 says听Dave Barton, executive director of the National Alliance for Accessible Golf, via email. 鈥淭he听USGA getting behind this particular effort ... is setting a bar that will inspire so many players and, I believe, program growth.鈥澨
鈥淕olf saved my life鈥
The USGA first announced plans for the听U.S. Adaptive Open in 2017, but it was delayed because of the pandemic. It joins other tournaments, like the United States Disabled Open, which was held for the fourth time in June.听
鈥淥ver our history, we鈥檝e continued to add more 鈥媍hampionships for more demographics,鈥澨齁ohn Bodenhamer, the USGA鈥檚 chief championships officer,听said in a statement to the Monitor. 鈥淲e felt strongly that the adaptive golf community deserved that same opportunity: to showcase their skills on the grandest stage in the game.鈥澨
Players are getting in line to participate in these specialized tournaments, and they often talk about their connection to the game.听鈥淚 can鈥檛 even count the number of times I have heard an individual say to me, 鈥楪olf saved my life,鈥欌 says Mr. Barton.听
While his group has been around since 2001, others aimed at supporting golfers with disabilities have existed longer: the United States Blind Golf Association was founded in 1953, the National Amputee Golf Association in 1954.
Organizations like these, and more recent ones, are helping to increase the options for players 鈥 arranging tournaments, and offering training, funding, and local inclusivity initiatives.
For example, the U.S. Adaptive Golf Alliance, founded in 2014, provides听鈥渃ompetitive pathways鈥澨齠or disabled golfers through its 40 grassroots member organizations. It holds instructional clinics and golf tournaments throughout the country (more than two dozen tournaments this year alone), and its members have recently provided as many as 10,000 lessons for disabled golfers annually.
鈥淭here is growing evidence of golf鈥檚 positive impact on health and well-being,鈥 writes Dr. Bern Bernacki, president of the Golf Heritage Society in Pittsburgh, in an email.
Aided by dedicated instructors and advances in technology, golf provides important therapeutic benefits to countless individuals with disabilities around the world, he adds.
The Professional Golfers鈥 Association (PGA)听has said听that adaptive golf is one of the game鈥檚 next great growth opportunities.听Some PGA pros 鈥 like Gary Woodland, the 2019 U.S. Open champion 鈥听are lending support.
Mr. Woodland recently befriended听Amy Bockerstette, a former collegiate athlete in her early 20s听who will compete this week at Pinehurst. The two went viral in 2019 when Ms. Bockerstette, who has Down syndrome, played a hole in a practice round with Mr. Woodland and fellow pro Matt Kuchar at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. She made par, repeating along the way the encouraging phrase, 鈥淚 got this.鈥
That same year, Ms. Bockerstette听and her family established the 鈥淚 Got This Foundation鈥 which听provides grants of up to $5,000 to groups and organizations that offer golf instruction and clinics to individuals with intellectual disabilities. The foundation also organizes tournaments and other events for disabled golfers.
鈥淚 become more confident through golf,鈥 she says in a video from the PGA Tour. 鈥淚 help people. That means a lot,鈥 she adds.
Getting the message out
Internationally, there is momentum as well. Earlier this year, EDGA (formerly known as the European Disabled Golf Association) and the DP World Tour, one of the main pro tours in Europe,听agreed to provide听financial support听to disabled golfers and to host additional tournaments through the G4D (Golf for the Disabled) Tour. EDGA is hosting more than two dozen tournaments for disabled golfers in Europe, Canada, and South Africa in 2022.听The organization is also听among those advocating for golf to be included in the Paralympics.听
Here in Sweden, Henrik Stenson, a six-time PGA Tour winner and the 2016 British Open champion, has taken the lead in hosting and promoting tournaments and other programs for Swedish golfers with disabilities.
This year for the second time, Mr. Stenson offered the summer paragolf challenge听that bears his name. Next month he says he will sponsor seven golf camps around the country for 7- to 15-year-olds 鈥渨ho can come out and give it a go and see if this is something they want to [pursue].鈥 He also听provides special equipment for disabled golfers throughout the country.
In an interview at the paragolf tournament in June, he says he has focused on 鈥渢rying to get new players interested [in the game] and supporting the ones that already play and compete.鈥澨
But he adds that more needs to be done to 鈥済et the message out鈥 to the wider public about adaptive golf and what it offers. The USGA-sponsored tournament at Pinehurst this month, he says, should help do just that.听