
Pitlochry
PGA Pro Mark Pirie teaching at Pitlochry School
PGA
Pro introduces 200 Perthshire children to golf
Two hundred
Perthshire primary school children in eight local schools
are being introduced to golf on the curriculum this term
as part of the national junior golf programme, clubgolf,
which seeks to give every Scottish nine year old an experience
of the game.
Whilst
the programme is rolling out across hundreds of schools
in Scotland, the main difference in the Perthshire schools
is that it is the local PGA Pro, not the school staff,
giving children their first lesson.
Mark
Pirie, the pro at Pitlochry Golf Club since 2003, and formerly
assistant pro at Craigie Hill and Crieff, has seized the
initiative and is teaching the basics in primary schools
at Blair Atholl, Breadalbane, Glenlyon, Grantully, Kinloch
Rannoch, Logierait, Pitlochry and Struan...and all in his
spare time.
“I’ve
done a lot of work with juniors at previous golf clubs
and here at Pitlochry we see juniors as the lifeblood of
the club,” said Mr Pirie.
“Kids
are great fun to work with because they’re very keen
to learn, they give you lots of feedback, take on board
what you are saying and they go away and do it. So on the
back of the Government backed clubgolf programme we are
keen to outreach the kids in Highland Perthshire.
“Some
of them will never have seen a golf club in their life
but if we can give them an introduction then hopefully
a few will take up the game seriously. If they do
then it’s going to benefit everybody.”
Emerging
out of Scotland’s successful bid to host the Ryder
Cup, clubgolf is a partnership between the Scottish Golf
Union, the Scottish Ladies' Golfing Association, the Professional
Golfers' Association, the Golf Foundation and sportscotland. The
programme has been developed as a direct result of the
Scottish Government’s commitment to introduce every
nine-year-old child in Scotland to the game.
clubgolf’s
introductory game (which in 2007 was experienced by 26,000
children in Scotland) uses modified equipment -
colourful clubs with special grips and oversized heads
and targets - to give children
in primary schools an enjoyable first impression of the
game.
“This
Tri-Golf gear is very well designed for children that
have never held a club and the equipment comes with game
cards which have a lot of different games so there is
variety and you can adapt them to make the game easier
or harder,” said Mr Pirie, who on Monday, together
with Karen Todd, Active Schools Co-ordinator for the
Breadalbane and Pitlochry schools cluster, completed
the first lap of one hour lessons in the seven schools.
“We
are looking for them to have fun and enjoyment; the kids
have been very keen to be involved and they are picking
it up very easily.”
With
an overwhelming reception from the children and their schools,
a second hour of coaching in each school will begin next
week. To ensure the programme will be self sustaining,
Mr Pirie will train staff at each school to enable them
to teach a further four hours of the programme.
“Karen
Todd has been a fantastic help in pushing to get golf onto
the curriculum,” said Mr Pirie. “We
are traditionally a rugby and netball area so to get golf
into schools at this time of the year is remarkable.
“The
schools are receptive and the teachers are keen to be involved
and teach something new. We now need to enrol the
teachers into the programme so they can teach it themselves
between now and the summer holidays.”
For
the 200 children, the in-school introduction is just the
start. Eight Pitlochry Golf Club members have been
trained to deliver Stage 1 of the clubgolf development
pathway at the club. On the 29th and 30th March,
the first weekend of the school holidays, the club has
organised a children’s Festival.
“We
are targeting junior non-members so they can see what it’s
all about at the club and we’ll show them putting,
chipping and iron and wood play. Hopefully it will
entice them to come along for coaching,” said Mr
Pirie.
“It
will run both days from 12 noon until 3.00pm and will be
free of charge. We’re hoping for 120 children both
days and they’ll need to contact us in advance to
book. It will be a friendly, relaxed atmosphere and we
are hoping parents will stay on site to be involved or
watch from the clubhouse.
“Obviously
long term we’d all love to find the next Open champion
that comes from Perthshire, but what we are really looking
for is to give the juniors an enjoyable introduction that
will hopefully plant the seed for life.”
To book a
place at the golf festival contact Mark Pirie on:
T:
01796 472792 E: pro@pitlochrygolf.co.uk