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Warren Bennett

The Battle for the Ryder Cup

Article produced with courtesy of BBC FiveLive "On the Line"

Will the greed of the players damage the grass roots of the sport? A fascinating programme on Five Live broadcast by the BBC on Monday 16th July gave an insight to the battle for power and money that threatens the future of the Ryder Cup. The players want more money and the players are talking tough.

An in depth investigation by Steve Chisolm in a recent "On the Line" programme broadcast on the BBC's FiveLive channel.

The Belfry in Sutton Coldfield is steeped in Ryder Cup history and it has been the venue for some of the most dramatic moments in sport. Since Torrance's winning putt in 1985 the Ryder Cup has become one of the most sought after prizes in world sport. Custodians of Sam Ryder's trophy are the Professional Golfers Association who subsidised the competition for fifty years to keep it alive. Just along from the 18th green is the PGA's headquarters the base for their Chief Executive, Sandy Jones who said "Sam Ryder gave us a remit, a trust to look after his gold trophy in the playing of that match forever more and we are going to maintain that position and when for seventy years the PGA were making losses there was no debate from anybody to help us out with those losses. Now the Association is making some profit, a profit which it has shared with the Tour then everyone is thinking they should take a bit more of the share."

Jean Van der Velde in action - Ryder Cup player in 1999

The future of the Ryder Cup is under threat because of the demands from Europe's richest golfers for more money. In 1975, the Tournament players broke away from the PGA, to set up the European Tour, an organisation to represent their interests and maximise their earnings. Former Secretary of the PGA, Colin Snape explained, "They took with them every tournament which could make them money. The Tour decided to take all the plum assets in tournament playing terms, PGA championship and so on and the Ryder Cup, well who wanted a loss leader? And that was left with the PGA with no debate on it. There had been a Trust Fund set up by Sam Ryder in 1927 at the start. All the information had been published in the PGA accounts and there was never a question that it remained with the PGA."

After the European success in 1985 the Ryder Cup balance sheet started to move from red to black and there was renewed interest from the European Tour. The profits grew and interest intensified culminating in 1991 with the Tour players threatening to boycott the competition unless they got half of the profits. The PGA had little option but to grant them their 50% and an equal say in the running of the competition. Now only ten years after the European Tour came for half of the money, they are back for the rest.

Last year, 91 players on the European Tour walked away with in excess of £100,000. Top money earner, Lee Westwood collected over £1.8 million. Paul Eales joined the Tour in 1989. He's averaged annual career earnings of just over £75,000 and appreciates that the more cash the Tour generates, the more will filter down to it's players. "We as the European Tour need a bigger piece of the pie and obviously that's upset Sandy Jones and his colleagues at the PGA, of which I am also a member. There's a nice piece of pie there and I am sure it needs to be split up accordingly. The Ryder Cup itself maybe twenty years ago was almost dead in the water when it was Great Britain and Ireland versus America. There was no way you could field team of great British Pros that would match the might of the Americans and of course the Europeans came into it and obviously you have got your Seve's and your Langer's that join the team and made it an equal contest and over the last few years the Europeans have just held the edge."

This is an argument which is common amongst the Tour players. Why should half of the Ryder Cup profits go to the British PGA when the team comprises European golfers? Thomas Bjorn, Sergio Garcia, Pierre Fulke, Jesper Parnevik, Jose Maria Olazabal and Bernhard Langer are all in contention for places and that's a view supported by number one British golfer, Lee Westwood "I think they feel that their national PGA's and home foundations should be associated with it more, like the Spanish Federation and the Swedish Federation, and I don't see any reason why not. There are a lot of European players involved and I don't see why it should be solely the British PGA"

Play during the 1993 Ryder Cup at the Brabazon Course

PGA insist that their work isn't restricted to the UK. In 1991 they instigated the PGA of Europe to promote golf across the continent and increase training and employment opportunities. For example, this year nearly 500 British professionals are working in Germany making up half of the German PGA. Speaking on behalf on the Swedish PGA, their Managing Director said "We have a very close relationship with the British PGA and the first four PGA's, the British PGA, the French, Italian and the Swedish PGA which started working to help the other PGA's to form their educational systems. We have all contributed and also learnt a lot from other countries and we are all helping each other to become stronger and stronger."

The European Tour need to increase their prize money to keep the top players. Already they have lost Swedish star, Jesper Parnavik, Spaniard Sergio Garcia and German legend Bernhard Langer to the American Tour where the prize money is much greater. Talks between the Tour and the PGA to discuss the 50:50% split of the Ryder Cup revenue are planned for after the Tournament in September. Once more the players hold all the aces. Paul Eales wouldn't support a strike but some are determined to increase their share no matter what it takes. "I'm sure one or two are saying that at the moment but if you ask all the Ryder Cup players that have played past and those that will play potential future Tournaments they just want the Ryder Cup to go as it is and forget the politics. It's just one of those things where you are sat day to day in the locker room and the guys are talking and saying we should have it all because we do everything for the Ryder Cup which is certainly the case but I think there does need to be a look at the whole thing and maybe a 50:50 split isn't quite the option at the moment."

As former Tour Professional, Andrew Murray explains "Some of the continental players could be in favour of a strike" "They could walk away. They have no affinity to the PGA. The Thomas Bjorn's of the world don't give two hoots to what happens to the PGA as long as they play in the Ryder Cup and the majority of the money that they create from the Ryder Cup goes to causes that they believe in. I think they have got to have some sort of say in where the money goes to" "If the players did walk away, there would be support from America wouldn't there?" "I think in a number of ways there would because this situation's also happening in America. There is no love lost between the USGA who run the Ryder Cup on behalf of America and the PGA Tour, what is effectively the Tour of America. It wouldn't surprise me with all the acrimony that is around that the players just say stuff it" "If you don't have the top players at the Ryder Cup, you don't have a Ryder Cup"

Lee Westwood - "It's vital that you get your best players there and I think that is the European Tour's argument and on the other hand, the PGA have been associated with the Ryder Cup for a long time. I think it has to be divided however they see fit between the PGA and the European Tour. The concept was helped along by the PGA in the early days and now the European Tour put a lot of effort in to promote the Ryder Cup and do a lot of the running of it and then whatever is left can go to charity. I think that's a good idea. They give a lot to charity in the States and I would like to see them do that here."

Paul Dermody - Chief Executive of the DeVere Group

The Professional Golfer's Association administer the largely unseen side of the sport. They look after the grass roots. The famous Belfry has hosted the Ryder Cup three times at the PGA Training Academy. The new diploma course gives the students a foundation in which to build a career in professional golf. Of course there's an awful lot more to it than just playing golf. This year alone they plan to invest half a million pounds in a training academy for young professionals and a sports side unit for golf coaches. £73,000 was spent on National Golf Week in April, an initiative with 500 centres across the UK giving those who might like to try the sport the chance to experience it.

They also made a £75,000 donation to the Golf Union of Ireland to develop coaching in Belfast. The PGA have even spent £25,000 on producing a video for schools offering advice to anyone wanting to become a golf professional. For the Professional Golfers Association half of their Ryder Cup revenue taken by the elite would be disastrous for the grass roots.

Chief Executive Sandy Jones said "The PGA services the game at all levels from the local municipal course and that's why we run National Golf Week for example to try and encourage people to play the game. We also extend our influence outside Europe and we now support the training programmes in South Africa for example because we have got some English Golf Professionals down there and we provide all the training materials. We have some in Argentina and other parts of the world such as Cuba. It's not just Europe it's across the world. Those are the sorts of investments we would have to look at cutting back on and that would be a tremendous tragedy for the game generally if that had to happen"

In the past twenty years the Ryder Cup has moved from losing £50,000 to making estimated profits of 8 and 10 million pounds by the time this year's match is completed and those figures will only rise. By 2009 it will be worth £20,000,000. On the Line exclusively revealed how much the Ryder Cup Committee demands. The figures are staggering. As the 2009 host each venue must pay a minimum of £2,000,000 to a Ryder Cup Legacy Fund with payment to the PGA to encourage growth of the game in that area.

On the Line reported that at least one of the bidders has offered more than double that figure. £1,000,000 each year for the next ten years to the Ryder Cup Committee for marketing golf tourism around Europe. The successful candidate will have to stage five far less lucrative tournaments every year for fifteen years. A European Tour Event, a Seniors Tour Event, a WPGA Ladies Tour Event, a Mastercard Event for Club Professionals and the National PGA Championship.

Two of the National bidders put up between 8 and 10 million pounds to meet this criteria. Scotland and Wales have refused to release the total value of their bids and On the Line revealed that the English bidder, Slaley Hall in Northumberland is worth in excess of £46,000,000. £22,500,000 of that is public money from Sport England to promote golf in the North East and introduce children to the sport. If the outlay is astonishing, then the return could be astronomical. The English Bid Committee believe that £140,000,000 will come into the North East if Slaley Hall was successful. But how much is the Ryder Cup worth to whichever business secures the prize.

Paul Dermody, Chief Executive of the DeVere Group who own Slaley Hall as well as the venue of this year's competition and three previous Ryder Cups, the Belfry said "It is difficult to say. We haven't actually published a specific figure, but let me say that it gives us the opportunity of spreading the De Vere brand among a much greater audience than we would have been able to do had we not had the Ryder Cup. I suppose to draw a parallel there, how much would that have cost in terms of marketing and advertising, I would be talking many millions of pounds. 28 or 29 countries will be seeing the Ryder Cup and many millions of people."

It isn't surprising that the competition between the six courses bidding to stage the 2009 event is fierce. The English bid is Slaley Hall in the North East, Scotland have put forward established championship courses in Turnberry, the preferred venue of Colin Montgomery, Gleneagles, Carnoustie and Loch Lomond. The Welsh bid comes from Celtic Manor in Newport. The Celtic Manor stands at the gateway to Wales in 1400 acres of panoramic parkland with views over the Severn Estuary and the Usk Valley. All six will make a presentation to the Ryder Cup Committee during the summer and the winner will be announced at the end of this year's competition at the end of September.

The Tour appear to have already decided where they want it to go however. In May their Executive Director Ken Schofield pre-judged the process by indicating his support for the Welsh bid. Despite not one venue having made a pitch, Schofield backed Celtic Manor in Newport owned by billionaire Terry Mathews. When the story broke, the PGA's Sandy Jones, Schofield's friend for over twenty years was amazed and appalled. "It took me by surprise at the time. We had a Ryder Cup Board Meeting just the day previous to that and there had been no mention. I then subsequently found out that the interviewer had called about an hour before the meeting and Ken hadn't mentioned that, but that's Ken's judgement and he has to drive the vehicle called the European Tour and the constituents there are two players who are high earners and he has to satisfy their demands so he chose that that was the right strategy for him. I am absolutely determined on this bid process that every venue, every country who has indicated their support for the Ryder Cup will have the full consideration."

When asked "Ken's backed Celtic Manor, What do you think his motivation is for that?", Sandy Jones replied "To me, obviously somewhere in the background is Terry Mathews and he has invested heavily in Celtic Manor and I am sure he is supporting the Wales bid for the Ryder Cup and it has been very impressively managed up until now. Maybe Ken has already made his mind up and has enough information that Wales and Celtic Manor should be the winner. We haven't been through the full process yet and until that happens I am certainly keeping my powder totally dry and all my options open".

If you have ever crossed the M4 you will have seen the Celtic Manor resort perched high overlooking the motorway. It's an unmissable complex, owned by Terry Mathews, a local man who has made his fortune from telecommunications. Speaking after last year's Wales Open, Mathews was full of praise for his course. "You get some players who have never played here and they say it's one of the best courses they have ever played. It's really something outstanding for me to hear. Of course this particular golf course was designed for the Ryder Cup in any event by Robert Trent Jones, probably no better golf course architect on the planet, so it's good to hear that confirmation from some of the best players. It really is a great course."

Despite Terry Mathews pride in his course, it is far from perfect. Seven new holes will have to be built along the flat Usk Valley floor adjoining the complex because the course is too hilly, and two current holes have to be re-designed. Celtic Manor's Director of Golf, Jim McKenzie, "At the moment the golf course is split into two pretty obvious geographical areas. There's the hillside and the valley floor. It's felt that the last few holes climbing back up will be too tough for players to play 36 holes and of course when the golf course was designed back in the mid 90's they were talking of a crowd of 30,000 a day. The matches of the Ryder Cup are now drawing about 45,000, so it's fair that the last five or six holes could be improved on and we are making every effort to do so."

The real cost of appeasing the players and catering for the fans could be to the environment. Standing on the hillside overlooking the site of the proposed re-build gives an impressive sight. A buzzard hovers overhead as a fox appears from the undergrowth. The area teems with wildlife. The river is named a special area for conservation by the European Community.

Morgan Parry of the World Wildlife Fund for Nature "The otter in particular is a protected species so the European designation is very precise. It looks at the river system itself but of course the whole system of the river, the flood planes, the tidal nature of the river is home to a host of different animals, the otter is one of them and the dormouse is another. These are very important species. The otter is coming back to South Wales and any development like this will have a major impact on the population." This area around here is of great archaeological interest as well. "Yes, that's the second area where the local Archaeological Trust has expressed its concern. Carleon was one of the three most important garrison towns in Roman times. There is a huge amount that we don't know about this area, and the remains of which have yet to be found and this development will have a huge impact on that. They will either be removed or buried."

Andrew Pimblett lives in the shadow of the Celtic Manor resort. He loves the natural habitat which surrounds his home. Andrew isn't against the Ryder Cup, indeed he is full of praise for the Welsh Assembly in their attempts to attract a world-class sporting event to Wales, but points out that they could be on the verge of ruining the very habitat which makes the area such an attraction. "They need to take half a million tons which is roughly equivalent to 50 times a twenty storey block of flats out of the hillside and dump it on the flood plain here. So for two years all you will see is complete obliteration. There will be no habitat in this valley".

Andrew went on to say that "the proposal proposed a six metre road which doesn't seem too wide and too obtrusive coming down the centre of the hill, but it doesn't seem a sufficiently big road to sustain the amount of people coming to watch the Ryder Cup." "We're talking 45,000 on the last days of the Ryder Cup and they are planning to bring that amount of people on a shuttle service down the side of this hill. It seems quite incredible to us and to be frank our real fear is that the infrastructure required for this valley is going to mean much bigger roads being built. We already have a 300 ft suspension bridge proposed. There will be a park and ride. This really is just the beginning of our plans for urbanisation of this valley."

Andrew Pimblett and the Usk Valley Defence Group are considering legal action against Newport Borough Council for awarding planning permission to the Celtic Manor re-development. The WWF and RSPB have both raised strong concerns. Lawyers are examining whether the full environmental studies into the impact of the changes have been satisfactorily carried out as directed by the EU.

In defence of the re-development Celtic Manor are keen to point out that they will set aside 60 acres of land as wildlife habitat. Morgan Parry "They are creating some wildlife habitat that wasn't there before but usually when this happens it doesn't create a habitat anything like as valuable as what was there before. In other words what they are going to do is that they are going to have a damaging effect and wildlife habitat is going to be destroyed but they are going to create something somewhere else where it doesn't affect their proposal"

So Ken Schofield's support of Celtic Manor appears premature. The course requires massive re-development with the creation of seven new holes, two completely re-designed holes and the construction of a new clubhouse. It could also encounter legal challenges. As the animosity of the Tour and the PGA continues to grow the threat of a strike by the big hitters has become something of a threat.

However, Sandy Jones of the PGA says before he goes against what Sam Ryder would have wanted, he will scrap the competition. "The players have decided that the Ryder Cup does not satisfy them anymore, does not satisfy their needs, then this is a moment in time to look at the Ryder Cup Match and rather than prostitute it in some sort of way by making it who writes the biggest cheque to play or give all the money to the players. I know the American PGA went through an issue with pay for play with the players, then perhaps if we reach that point where it is a total impass then the only option open to the PGA is to say that this trophy that we were made responsible for 70 years ago has now got to sit on the shelf and be looked at in a museum and we will talk about the great glory days of the matches, and sadly the players will go on and do something else. I understand that, they won't suddenly dry up and not play any more but the Ryder Cup maybe isn't played for any more."

Posturing then on both sides but what is certain is that the negotiations that will follow this September's Ryder Cup will prove every bit as dramatic as anything that has gone before.

Reproduction of this article or any part thereof is prohibited without the prior written permission of Radio 5 Live and Golftoday.

 


 


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