Growing the game of golf difficult in ex-Soviet Bloc

Released on = August 9, 2007, 12:03 pm

Press Release Author = GolfPublisher Syndications

Industry = Media

Press Release Summary = If you\'re lucky to come from a golf-rich country like the
U.S., Britain or Ireland, it can be hard to imagine places - especially in developed
Europe - where golf really struggles to catch on.


Press Release Body = By Jeffrey White,
Golf Publisher Syndications

SEMLIN AM SEE, Germany - If you\'re lucky to come from a golf-rich country like the
U.S., Britain or Ireland, it can be hard to imagine places - especially in developed
Europe - where golf really struggles to catch on.

Welcome to eastern Germany. And welcome to Simon Dicksee\'s challenge.

Dicksee is an Englishman, an old R&A hand who has spent a good portion of his
professional life traveling the globe and putting R&A money towards growing the game
in places like Iran.

Now on his own and away from the R&A, Dicksee has settled down as the head pro at
Golf Resort Semlin, about an hour\'s drive outside Berlin - and he wants to get more
Germans to embrace the game.

But this is easier said than done.

\"This is still a new sport here in many ways,\" he says. \"Mostly it\'s the German
nouveau rich that are taking up the game. It\'s still not seen as a game for the
general public.\"

Semlin, an attractive, small resort, is right in the heart of what used to be acres
of Soviet collective farmland in the German Democratic Republic (DDR). East Germany
was firmly in the Soviet Bloc and thus those who grew up here were taught to be
scornful of the trappings of bourgeois life.

Team sports were the thing during communist times - by this, we\'re talking team
sports that extolled the supremacy of socialism - and individual sports like golf
and tennis were labeled too elitist, the playgrounds of the rich and decadent.

Therefore, what we\'re living through now is a time when really the first generation
of central and eastern Europeans is discovering golf. In the 17 years since the fall
of the Berlin Wall, golf courses have sprung up in places like Poland, Hungary, the
Czech Republic and eastern Germany.

This does not attract the attention of us in the U.S. (and really, why should it?).
Yet it\'s interesting to watch a sport\'s birth among a people, many of who probably
still have parents and grandparents questioning their enthusiasm for such a
\"western\" game like golf.

One of the LPGA Tour\'s up-and-commers is named Jana Peterkova. She hasn\'t done too
much to date, but this Czech golfer knows what the game she\'s come to master
represents to her family, who defected to Australia prior to the 1989 Velvet
Revolution in then-Czechoslovakia.

\"My dad forced me to play [golf] as a way of rebelling against the communist
regime,\" Peterkova told WorldGolf\'com\'s Brandon Tucker at this year\'s U.S. Women\'s
Open.

For more details visit - :
http://www.worldgolf.com/column/golf-in-central-and-eastern-europe-growing-slowly-5805.htm

August 3, 2007
Any opinions expressed above are those of the writer and do not necessarily
represent the views of the management.

Author/Company
GolfPublisher Syndications


Web Site = http://www.worldgolf.com

Contact Details = Author/Company
GolfPublisher Syndications
Email - golfpublisherusa@gmail.com
Website - http://www.worldgolf.com

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