By Charles Gacheru
I spent my Eid playing golf on one of Kenya’s most
challenging golf courses, the Kenya Railway Golf Club, and I was engaged
in a discussion as to whether Kenya has any truly championship golf
course or whether we need them.
The first question is easy to answer; this country has a few courses that can be described as “championship courses”.
Top of that list is the Baobab Course at Vipingo
Ridge – this course is fit to host any PGA event and can hold its own
against any of the Top 100 golf courses in the world easily.
The Great Rift Valley Golf Resort, the Muthaiga
Golf Club, Karen Country Club, Sigona, Windsor and the Royal Nairobi
Golf Club all have, to greater and lesser extents, championship golf
courses.
For many of us, whose only source of information is
the television, my views here may seem absurd. However, to those who
have travelled around the globe to watch PGA events, they will know that
many of the courses that host The Open, for example, are not too
different from our own courses.
Let me now describe a golf course that may surprise
you, and you may decide if this course is indeed a championship golf
course.
In 1891, the Honourable Company of Golfers built
Muirfield and they were the first club to write down the 13 articles of
golf that were later transformed into the first rules of golf.
Muirfield first hosted The Open in 1892 and since
that time, they have hosted the event severally. Muirfield practices
“natural greenkeeping” and it was not until 2011 that they installed an
automatic sprinkler system for tees and greens (not fairways).
At one point, the course had 225 bunkers (Leisure
Lodge in Kwale is the most bunkered course in Kenya with about 83
bunkers); the bunkers at Muirfield have since been reduced to 170.
According to the golfdigest.com, the golf
course is essentially the same today as it was in the 1930s – the firm
greens have been maintained. So is Muirfield a championship golf course?
According to the USGA, the average golf course
construction costs range from $1.6 million to $4.5 million (Sh140
million to Sh395 million). With the clamour for more “beautiful” golf
course, the annual maintenance budgets have increased; in 1998, it cost
$383,000 (Sh33 million) to maintain a public golf course and just over
$600,000 (Sh52 million) for private golf courses.
To maintain an average golf course (read a public golf course) would cost Sh33 million!
Does the maturity of the Kenyan golf market justify
the financial pain that comes with maintaining a championship golf
course? Do we as golfers demand championship golf courses? The average
weekend golfer is probably a 18-handicap golfer, whose tee shots slice
wildly to the left and hardly cover 200-yards.
Does this typical golfer want to make triple bogeys
for the rest of his life on the golf course where his Sh40 million
house sits? I would think not. This guy wants to buy a property on a
well maintained golf course, that is challenging but not frustrating.
I have played on many championship golf courses,
and they are frustrating — the carries to the fairways are long, they
are heavily bunkered, the greens are as fast as glass and there is water
everywhere!
No comments:
Post a Comment